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1.
Xu M Elmatad YS Sebastianelli F Moskowitz JW Bacić Z 《The journal of physical chemistry. B》2006,110(49):24806-24811
We report quantum five-dimensional (5D) calculations of the energy levels and wave functions of the hydrogen molecule, para-H2 and ortho-H2, confined inside the small dodecahedral (H2O)20 cage of the sII clathrate hydrate. All three translational and the two rotational degrees of freedom of H2 are included explicitly, as fully coupled, while the cage is treated as rigid. The 5D potential energy surface (PES) of the H2-cage system is pairwise additive, based on the high-quality ab initio 5D (rigid monomer) PES for the H2-H2O complex. The bound state calculations involve no dynamical approximations and provide an accurate picture of the quantum 5D translation-rotation dynamics of H2 inside the cage. The energy levels are assigned with translational (Cartesian) and rotational quantum numbers, based on calculated root-mean-square displacements and probability density plots. The translational modes exhibit negative anharmonicity. It is found that j is a good rotational quantum number, while the threefold degeneracy of the j = 1 level is lifted completely. There is considerable translation-rotation coupling, particularly for excited translational states. 相似文献
2.
We have performed a rigorous theoretical study of the quantum translation-rotation (T-R) dynamics of one and two H2 and D2 molecules confined inside the large hexakaidecahedral (5(12)6(4)) cage of the sII clathrate hydrate. For a single encapsulated H2 and D2 molecule, accurate quantum five-dimensional calculations of the T-R energy levels and wave functions are performed that include explicitly, as fully coupled, all three translational and the two rotational degrees of freedom of the hydrogen molecule, while the cage is taken to be rigid. In addition, the ground-state properties, energetics, and spatial distribution of one and two p-H2 and o-D2 molecules in the large cage are calculated rigorously using the diffusion Monte Carlo method. These calculations reveal that the low-energy T-R dynamics of hydrogen molecules in the large cage are qualitatively different from that inside the small cage, studied by us recently. This is caused by the following: (i) The large cage has a cavity whose diameter is about twice that of the small cage for the hydrogen molecule. (ii) In the small cage, the potential energy surface (PES) for H2 is essentially flat in the central region, while in the large cage the PES has a prominent maximum at the cage center, whose height exceeds the T-R zero-point energy of H2/D2. As a result, the guest molecule is excluded from the central part of the large cage, its wave function localized around the off-center global minimum. Peculiar quantum dynamics of the hydrogen molecule squeezed between the central maximum and the cage wall manifests in the excited T-R states whose energies and wave functions differ greatly from those for the small cage. Moreover, they are sensitive to the variations in the hydrogen-bonding topology, which modulate the corrugation of the cage wall. 相似文献
3.
We have performed rigorous quantum five-dimensional (5D) calculations and analysis of the translation-rotation (T-R) energy levels of one H(2), D(2), and HD molecule inside the small dodecahedral (H(2)O)(20) cage of the structure II clathrate hydrate, which was treated as rigid. The H(2)- cage intermolecular potential energy surface (PES) used previously in the molecular dynamics simulations of the hydrogen hydrates [Alavi et al., J. Chem. Phys. 123, 024507 (2005)] was employed. This PES, denoted here as SPC/E, combines an effective, empirical water-water pair potential [Berendsen et al., J. Phys. Chem. 91, 6269 (1987)] and electrostatic interactions between the partial charges placed on H(2)O and H(2). The 5D T-R eigenstates of HD were calculated also on another 5D H(2)-cage PES denoted PA-D, used by us earlier to investigate the quantum T-R dynamics of H(2) and D(2) in the small cage [Xu et al., J. Phys. Chem. B 110, 24806 (2006)]. In the PA-D PES, the hydrogen-water pair potential is described by the ab initio 5D PES of the isolated H(2)-H(2)O dimer. The quality of the SPC/E and the PA-D H(2)-cage PESs was tested by direct comparison of the T-R excitation energies calculated on them to the results of two recent inelastic neutron scattering (INS) studies of H(2) and HD inside the small clathrate cage. The translational fundamental and overtone excitations, as well as the triplet splittings of the j=0-->j=1 rotational transitions, of H(2) and HD in the small cage calculated on the SPC/E PES agree very well with the INS results and represent a significant improvement over the results computed on the PA-D PES. Our calculations on the SPC/E PES also make predictions about several spectroscopic observables for the encapsulated H(2), D(2), and HD, which have not been measured yet. 相似文献
4.
I Matanović JL Belof B Space K Sillar J Sauer J Eckert Z Bačić 《The Journal of chemical physics》2012,137(1):014701
We report rigorous quantum five-dimensional (5D) calculations of the coupled translation-rotation (T-R) eigenstates of a H(2) molecule adsorbed in metal organic framework-5 (MOF-5), a prototypical nanoporous material, which was treated as rigid. The anisotropic interactions between H(2) and MOF-5 were represented by the analytical 5D intermolecular potential energy surface (PES) used previously in the simulations of the thermodynamics of hydrogen sorption in this system [Belof et al., J. Phys. Chem. C 113, 9316 (2009)]. The global and local minima on this 5D PES correspond to all of the known binding sites of H(2) in MOF-5, three of which, α-, β-, and γ-sites are located on the inorganic cluster node of the framework, while two of them, the δ- and ε-sites, are on the phenylene link. In addition, 2D rotational PESs were calculated ab initio for each of these binding sites, keeping the center of mass of H(2) fixed at the respective equilibrium geometries; purely rotational energy levels of H(2) on these 2D PESs were computed by means of quantum 2D calculations. On the 5D PES, the three adjacent γ-sites lie just 1.1 meV above the minimum-energy α-site, and are separated from it by a very low barrier. These features allow extensive wave function delocalization of even the lowest translationally excited T-R eigenstates over the α- and γ-sites, presenting significant challenges for both the quantum bound-state calculations and the analysis of the results. Detailed comparison is made with the available experimental data. 相似文献
5.
Desmedt A Stallmach F Lechner RE Cavagnat D Lassègues JC Guillaume F Grondin J Gonzalez MA 《The Journal of chemical physics》2004,121(23):11916-11926
In the perchloric acid clathrate hydrate HClO4.5.5H2O, the perchlorate anions are contained inside an aqueous host crystalline matrix, positively charged because of the presence of delocalized acidic protons. Our experimental results demonstrate that the microscopic mechanisms of proton conductivity in this system are effective on a time scale ranging from nanosecond to picosecond. In the present paper, we discuss more specifically on the relaxation processes occurring on a nanosecond time scale by combining high-resolution quasielastic neutron scattering and 1H pulse-field-gradient nuclear magnetic resonance experiments. The combination of these two techniques allows us to probe proton dynamics in both space and time domains. The existence of two types of proton dynamical processes has been identified. The slowest one is associated to long-range translational diffusion of protons between crystallographic oxygen sites and has been precisely characterized with a self-diffusion coefficient of 3.5 x 10(-8) cm2/s at 220 K and an activation energy of 29.2+/-1.4 kJ/mol. The fastest dynamical process is due to water molecules' reorientations occurring every 0.7 ns at 220 K with an activation energy of 17.4+/-1.5 kJ/mol. This powerful multitechnique approach provides important information required to understand the microscopic origin of proton transport in an ionic clathrate hydrate. 相似文献
6.
We report quantum dynamics calculations of the translation-rotation energy levels of one hydrogen molecule inside the small, medium and large cages of the structure H clathrate hydrate. The calculations are performed using the multiconfiguration time-dependent Hartree (MCTDH) method. Some low-lying states are computed for para-H(2), ortho-H(2), para-D(2), ortho-D(2) and HD, by block improved relaxation. 相似文献
7.
The absorption of light during atomic collisions is treated by coupling electronic excitations, treated quantum mechanically, to the motion of the nuclei described within a short de Broglie wavelength approximation, using a density matrix approach. The time-dependent electric dipole of the system provides the intensity of light absorption in a treatment valid for transient phenomena, and the Fourier transform of time-dependent intensities gives absorption spectra that are very sensitive to details of the interaction potentials of excited diatomic states. We consider several sets of atomic expansion functions and atomic pseudopotentials, and introduce new parametrizations to provide light absorption spectra in good agreement with experimentally measured and ab initio calculated spectra. To this end, we describe the electronic excitation of the valence electron of excited alkali atoms in collisions with noble gas atoms with a procedure that combines l-dependent atomic pseudopotentials, including two- and three-body polarization terms, and a treatment of the dynamics based on the eikonal approximation of atomic motions and time-dependent molecular orbitals. We present results for the collision induced absorption spectra in the Li-He system at 720 K, which display both atomic and molecular transition intensities. 相似文献
8.
Nada H 《The journal of physical chemistry. B》2006,110(33):16526-16534
A molecular dynamics simulation of a three-phase system including a gas clathrate, liquid water, and a gas was carried out at 298 K and high pressure in order to investigate the growth mechanism of the clathrate from a dilute aqueous gas solution. The simulation indicated that the clathrate grew on interfaces between the clathrate and the liquid water, after transfer of the gas molecules from the gas phase to the interfaces. The results suggest a two-step process for growth: first, gas molecules are arranged at cage sites, and second, H(2)O molecules are ordered near the gas molecules. The results also suggest that only the H(2)O molecules, which are surrounded or sandwiched by the gas molecules, form the stable polygons that constitute the cages of the clathrate. In addition, the growth of the clathrate from a concentrated aqueous gas solution was also simulated, and the results suggested a growth mechanism in which many H(2)O and gas molecules correctively form the structure of the clathrate. The clathrate grown from the concentrated solution contained some empty cages, whereas the formation of empty cages was not observed during the growth from the dilute solution. The results obtained by both simulations are compared with the results of an experimental study, and the growth mechanism of the clathrate in a real system is discussed. 相似文献
9.
Vibrational frequencies of guest molecules in clathrate hydrates reflect the molecular environment and dynamical behavior of molecules. A detailed understanding of the mechanism for the vibrational frequency changes of the guest molecules in the clathrate hydrate cages is still incomplete. In this study, molecular vibrations of methane molecules in a structure I clathrate hydrate are calculated from ab initio molecular dynamics simulation. The vibrational spectra of methane are computed by Fourier transform of autocorrelation functions, which reveal distinct separation of each vibrational mode. Calculated symmetric and asymmetric stretching vibrational frequencies of methane molecules are lower in the large cages than in the small cages (8 and 16 cm(-1) for symmetric and asymmetric stretching, respectively). These changes are closely linked with the C-H bond length. The vibrational frequencies for the bending and rocking vibrational modes nearly overlap in each of the cages. 相似文献
10.
Molecular dynamics simulations of the pure structure II tetrahydrofuran clathrate hydrate and binary structure II tetrahydrofuran clathrate hydrate with CO(2), CH(4), H(2)S, and Xe small cage guests are performed to study the effect of the shape, size, and intermolecular forces of the small cages guests on the structure and dynamics of the hydrate. The simulations show that the number and nature of the guest in the small cage affects the probability of hydrogen bonding of the tetrahydrofuran guest with the large cage water molecules. The effect on hydrogen bonding of tetrahydrofuran occurs despite the fact that the guests in the small cage do not themselves form hydrogen bonds with water. These results indicate that nearest neighbour guest-guest interactions (mediated through the water lattice framework) can affect the clathrate structure and stability. The implications of these subtle small guest effects on clathrate hydrate stability are discussed. 相似文献
11.
Guest-host hydrogen bonding in clathrate hydrates occurs when in addition to the hydrophilic moiety which causes the molecule to form hydrates under high pressure-low temperature conditions, the guests contain a hydrophilic, hydrogen bonding functional group. In the presence of carbon dioxide, ethanol clathrate hydrate has been synthesized with 10% of large structure I (sI) cages occupied by ethanol. In this work, we use molecular dynamics simulations to study hydrogen bonding structure and dynamics in this binary sI clathrate hydrate in the temperature range of 100-250 K. We observe that ethanol forms long-lived (>500 ps) proton-donating and accepting hydrogen bonds with cage water molecules from both hexagonal and pentagonal faces of the large cages while maintaining the general cage integrity of the sI clathrate hydrate. The presence of the nondipolar CO(2) molecules stabilizes the hydrate phase, despite the strong and prevalent alcohol-water hydrogen bonding. The distortions of the large cages from the ideal form, the radial distribution functions of the guest-host interactions, and the ethanol guest dynamics are characterized in this study. In previous work through dielectric and NMR relaxation time studies, single crystal x-ray diffraction, and molecular dynamics simulations we have observed guest-water hydrogen bonding in structure II and structure H clathrate hydrates. The present work extends the observation of hydrogen bonding to structure I hydrates. 相似文献
12.
Volker Staemmler 《Zeitschrift für Physik D Atoms, Molecules and Clusters》1992,22(4):741-745
Quantum chemical ab initio calculations have been performed for the vertical excitation energies and oscillator strengths of all low-lying electronically excited states of small helium cluster ions, He n + ,n=2, ..., 7. The geometrical structures of the ions were fixed at the equilibrium geometries of the respective ground states, for He 4 + and He 5 + also one alternative structure was considered. The low-lying excited states can be classified into two categories: the electronic transition can occur either within the central He 2 + or He 3 + unit or from the peripheral weakly bound He atoms to this unit. The latter transitions are very weak (f≈0.001), closely spaced, with vertical excitation energies of about 5.7 eV. The He 2 + and He 3 + units have strong transitions at 9.93 and 5.55 eV, respectively; these transitions are only slightly blue-shifted if He 2 + or He 3 + are placed as “chromophores” into the centre of a larger He n + cluster. The large difference in the vertical excitation energy of the strong transition should enable an experimental decision of the question whether the cluster ions have He 2 + or He 3 + cores. 相似文献
13.
Tachikawa H Yabushita A Kawasaki M 《Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP》2011,13(46):20745-20749
A direct ab initio molecular dynamics method has been applied to a water monomer and water clusters (H(2)O)(n) (n = 1-3) to elucidate the effects of zero-point energy (ZPE) vibration on the absorption spectra of water clusters. Static ab initio calculations without ZPE showed that the first electronic transitions of (H(2)O)(n), (1)B(1)←(1)A(1), are blue-shifted as a function of cluster size (n): 7.38 eV (n = 1), 7.58 eV (n = 2) and 8.01 eV (n = 3). The inclusion of the ZPE vibration strongly affects the excitation energies of a water dimer, and a long red-tail appears in the range of 6.42-6.90 eV due to the structural flexibility of a water dimer. The ultraviolet photodissociation of water clusters and water ice surfaces is relevant to these results. 相似文献
14.
Equilibrium ab initio (AI) and classical constant pressure-constant temperature molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have been performed to investigate the dynamical properties in (type I) hydrogen sulphide hydrate at 150 and 300 K and 1 bar, and also lower temperatures, with particular scrutiny of guest motion. The rattling motions of the guests in the large and small cavities were around 45 and 75-80 cm(-1), respectively, from AIMD, with the corresponding classical MD modes being 10-12 cm(-1) less at 150 K and around 5 cm(-1) lower at 300 K. The rattling motion in the small cavity overlapped somewhat with the translational motion of the host lattice (with modes at circa 85 and 110 cm(-1)), due in part to a smaller cage radius and more frequent occurrences of guest-host hydrogen bonding leading to greater coupling in the motion. The experimentally determined H-S stretch and H-S-H bending frequencies, in the vicinity of 2550-2620 and 1175 cm(-1) [H.R. Richardson et al., J. Chem. Phys.1985, 83, 4387] were reproduced successfully in the AIMD simulations. Consideration of Kubic harmonics for the guest molecules from AIMD revealed that a preferred orientation of the dipole-vector (or C(2)-axis) exists at 150 K vis--vis the [100] cube axis in both the small and large cavities, but is markedly more significant for the small cavity, while there is no preferred orientation at 300 K. In comparison, classical MD did not reveal any preferred orientation at either temperature, or at 75 K (closer to the AIMD simulation at 150 K vis-à-vis that approach's estimated melting point). Probing rotational dynamics of the guests reinforced this temperature effect, revealing more rapid rotational time scales at 300 K with faster decay times of dipole-vector (C(2)) and H-H-vector (C(2)(y)) being similar for each cage, at around 0.25 and 0.2 ps, respectively, versus approximately 0.45 and 0.5 ps (large) and 0.8 ps (small) at 150 K. It was found that the origin of the observed preferred orientations, especially in the small cages, at 150 K via AIMD was attributable to optimization of the dipolar interaction between the guest and outward-pointing water dipoles in the cavity, with guests "flitting" rotationally between various such configurations, forming occasionally hydrogen bonds with the host molecules. 相似文献
15.
M. Zakrzewski D. D. Klug J. A. Ripmeester 《Journal of inclusion phenomena and macrocyclic chemistry》1994,17(3):237-247
A high-pressure phase of the clathrate hydrate of tetrahydrofuran was prepared by freezing a liquid phase of overall composition THF · 7 H2O under a pressure of 3.0 kbar, or by pressurizing the solid structure II THF hydrate of 255K to 3.4 kbar. Unfortunately, the products recovered at 77K were always mixed phase materials as shown by X-ray powder diffraction. A number of diffraction lines could be indexed in terms of the cubic structure I hydrate with a slightly expanded lattice parameter, 12.08 Å, giving some support to Dyadin's idea that the high pressure phase transition involves a conversion of Structure II to Structure I. Other phases observed in the recovered product include Ice IX and amorphous materials. The reversion of the high pressure sample to the structure II hydrate was followed by differential scanning calorimetry. At ambient pressure, the high pressure sample converts slowly back to Structure II hydrate event at 77K.NRCC No. 35786. 相似文献
16.
The dispersed fluorescence spectrum of the ground electronic state of thiophosgene, SCCl2, is analyzed in a very complex region of vibrational excitation, 7000-9000 cm(-1). The final result is that most of the inferred excited vibrational levels are assigned in terms of approximate constants of the motion. Furthermore, each level is associated with a rung on a ladder of quantum states on the basis of common reduced dimension fundamental motions. The resulting ladders cannot be identified by any experimental means, and it is the interspersing in energy of their rungs that makes the spectrum complex even after the process of level separation into polyads. Van Vleck perturbation theory is used to create polyad constants of the motion and a spectroscopic Hamiltonian from a potential fitted to experimental data. The eigen functions of this spectroscopic Hamiltonian are rewritten as semiclassical wave functions and transformed to a representation that allows us to analyze and assign the spectra with no other work other than to utilize concepts from nonlinear dynamics. 相似文献
17.
The rotational mobility of encaged trimethylene oxide (TMO) molecules was studied down to 1.8°K by sub-MHz dielectric measurements of the structure I H2O clathrate and by proton magnetic resonance measurements of the corresponding D2O clathrate. The results indicate that below a transitional temperature range about 105°K most TMO dipoles assume parallel alignment along the axes of the cages. Below the transition the proton second moment suggests the presence of hindered rotation of TMO about its polar axis until the rigid-lattice condition is reached below 5°K. Some residual very broad dielectric absorption (activation energy 2.1 kcal/mole) persists to very low temperatures. Guest-guest and guest-host interaction energies are calculated for simple models 相似文献
18.
The rotational dynamics of CO single molecules solvated in small He clusters (CO @ HeN) has been studied using reptation quantum Monte Carlo simulations for cluster sizes up to N = 30. Our results are in good agreement with the rotovibrational features of the infrared spectrum recently determined for this system and provide a deep insight into the relation between the structure of the cluster and its dynamics. Simulations for large N also provide a prediction of the effective moment of inertia of CO in the He nanodroplet regime, which has not been measured so far. 相似文献
19.
The dynamics of water near the polar headgroups of surfactants in a monolayer adsorbed at the air/water interface is likely to play a decisive role in determining the physical behavior of such organized assemblies. We have carried out an atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of a monolayer of the anionic surfactant sodium bis(2-ethyl-1-hexyl) sulfosuccinate (aerosol-OT or AOT) adsorbed at the air/water interface. The simulation is performed at room temperature with a surface coverage of that at the critical micelle concentration (78 Angstrom(2)/molecule). Detailed analyses of the lifetime dynamics of surfactant-water (SW) and water-water (WW) hydrogen bonds at the interface have been carried out. The nonexponential hydrogen bond lifetime correlation functions have been analyzed by using the formalism of Luzar and Chandler, which allowed identification of the bound states at the interface and quantification of the dynamic equilibrium between bound and quasi-free water molecules, in terms of time-dependent relaxation rates. It is observed that the water molecules present in the first hydration layer form strong hydrogen bonds with the surfactant headgroups and hence have longer lifetimes. Importantly, it is found that the overall relaxation of the SW hydrogen bonds is faster for those water molecules which form two hydrogen bonds with the surfactant headgroups than those forming one such hydrogen bond. Equally interestingly, it is further noticed that water molecules beyond the first hydration layer form weaker hydrogen bonds than pure bulk water. 相似文献