25 research outputs found
Vibrational Spectroscopy of Microhydrated Conjugate Base Anions
Conjugate-base anions are ubiquitous in aqueous solution. Understanding the hydration of these anions at the molecular level represents a long-standing goal in chemistry. A molecular-level perspective on ion hydration is also important for understanding the surface speciation and reactivity of aerosols, which are a central component of atmospheric and oceanic chemical cycles. In this Account, as a means of studying conjugate-base anions in water, we describe infrared multiple-photon dissociation spectroscopy on clusters in which the sulfate, nitrate, bicarbonate, and suberate anions are hydrated by a known number of water molecules. This spectral technique, used over the range of 550–1800 cm–1, serves as a structural probe of these clusters. The experiments follow how the solvent network around the conjugate-base anion evolves, one water molecule at a time. We make structural assignments by comparing the experimental infrared spectra to those obtained from electronic structure calculations. Our results show how changes in anion structure, symmetry, and charge state have a profound effect on the structure of the solvent network. Conversely, they indicate how hydration can markedly affect the structure of the anion core in a microhydrated cluster. Some key results include the following. The first few water molecules bind to the anion terminal oxo groups in a bridging fashion, forming two anion–water hydrogen bonds. Each oxo group can form up to three hydrogen bonds; one structural result, for example, is the highly symmetric, fully coordinated SO42–(H2O)6 cluster, which only contains bridging water molecules. Adding more water molecules results in the formation of a solvent network comprising water–water hydrogen bonding in addition to hydrogen bonding to the anion. For the nitrate, bicarbonate, and suberate anions, fewer bridging sites are available, namely, three, two, and one (per carboxylate group), respectively. As a result, an earlier onset of water–water hydrogen bonding is observed. When there are more than three hydrating water molecules (n > 3), the formation of a particularly stable four-membered water ring is observed for hydrated nitrate and bicarbonate clusters. This ring binds in either a side-on (bicarbonate) or top-on (nitrate) fashion. In the case of bicarbonate, additional water molecules then add to this water ring rather than directly to the anion, indicating a preference for surface hydration. In contrast, doubly charged sulfate dianions are internally hydrated and characterized by the closing of the first hydration shell at n = 12. The situation is different for the –O2C(CH2)6CO2– (suberate) dianion, which adapts to the hydration network by changing from a linear to a folded structure at n > 15. This change is driven by the formation of additional solute–solvent hydrogen bonds
Gas-phase vibrational spectroscopy of microhydrated magnesium nitrate ions mgno3(h2o)(1-4)
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99083.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access
Gas phase infrared spectroscopy of mono- and divanadium oxide cluster cations
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98883.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access
Gas phase infrared spectroscopy of cluster anions as a function of size: The effect of solvation on hydrogen-bonding in br-center dot(hbr)(1,2,3) clusters
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98927.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access
Vibrational spectra of small silicon monoxide cluster cations measured by infrared multiple photon dissociation spectroscopy
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98809.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access