Study of the In2O3 molecule in the free state and in the crystal |
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Authors: | Ilya G. Kaplan Leonid I. Trakhtenberg |
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Affiliation: | 1. Instituto de Investigaciones en Materiales , Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad de México, Mexico;2. Department of Kinetics and Catalysis, Semenov Institute of Chemical Physics Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia;3. SSC RF ?Karpov Institute of Physical Chemistry?, Moscow, Russia |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTThe nanomaterials based on the In2O3 molecule are widely used as catalysts and sensors among other applications. In the present study, we discuss the possibility of using nanoclusters of In2O3 as molecular photomotors. A comparative analysis of the electronic structure of the In2O3 molecule in the free state and in the crystal is performed. For the free In2O3 molecule the geometry of its lowest structures, V-shape and linear, was optimised at the CCSD(T) level, which is the most precise computational method applied up to date to study In2O3. Using experimental crystallographic data, we determined the geometry of In2O3 in the crystal. It has a zigzag, not symmetric structure and possesses a dipole moment with magnitude slightly smaller than that of the V-structure of the free molecule (the linear structure due to its symmetry has no dipole moment). According to the Natural Atomic population analysis, the chemical structure of the linear In2O3 can be represented as O = In?O?In = O; the V-shaped molecule has the similar double- and single-bond structure. The construction of nanoclusters from ?bricks? of In2O3 with geometry extracted from crystal (or nanoclusters extracted directly from crystal) and their use as photo-driven molecular motors are discussed. |
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Keywords: | In2O3 molecular motors crystal structure dipole moment nature of bonding |
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