81 research outputs found
Ab initio study of intermolecular potential of H2O trimer
Nonadditive contribution to the interaction energy in water trimer is analyzed in terms of HeitlerâLondon exchange, SCF deformation, induction and dispersion nonadditivities. Nonadditivity originates mainly from the SCF deformation effect which is due to electric polarization. However, polarization does not serve as a universal mechanism for nonadditivity in water. In the doubleâdonor configuration, for example, the HeitlerâLondon exchange contribution is the most important and polarization yields the wrong sign. Correlation effects do not contribute significantly to the nonadditivity. A detailed analysis of the pair potential is also provided. The present twoâbody potential and its components are compared to the existing ab initio potentials (MCY) as well as to empirical ones (RWK2,TIP,SPC). The ways to improve these potentials are suggested
Ab initio study of the intermolecular potential of ArâH2O
The combination of supermolecular MøllerâPlesset treatment with the perturbation theory of intermolecular forces is applied in the analysis of the potentialâenergy surface of ArâH2O. The surface is very isotropic with the lowest barrier for rotation of âź35 cmâ1 above the absolute minimum. The lower bound for De is found to be 108 cmâ1 and the complex reveals a very floppy structure, with Ar moving freely from the Hâbridged structure to the coplanar and almost perpendicular arrangement of the C2 âwater axis and the ArâO axis, ââTâshapedââ structure. This motion is almost isoenergetic (energy change of less than 2 cmâ1 ). The Hâbridged structure is favored by the attractive induction and dispersion anisotropies; the Tâshaped structure is favored by repulsive exchange anisotropy. The nonadditive effect in the Ar2âH2O cluster was also calculated. Implications of our results on the present models of hydrophobic interactions are also discussed
Scattering length of the ground state Mg+Mg collision
We have constructed the X 1SIGMAg+ potential for the collision between two
ground state Mg atoms and analyzed the effect of uncertainties in the shape of
the potential on scattering properties at ultra-cold temperatures. This
potential reproduces the experimental term values to 0.2 inverse cm and has a
scattering length of +1.4(5) nm where the error is prodominantly due to the
uncertainty in the dissociation energy and the C6 dispersion coefficient. A
positive sign of the scattering length suggests that a Bose-Einstein condensate
of ground state Mg atoms is stable.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures, Submitted Phys. Rev.
Tractable non-local correlation density functionals for flat surfaces and slabs
A systematic approach for the construction of a density functional for van
der Waals interactions that also accounts for saturation effects is described,
i.e. one that is applicable at short distances. A very efficient method to
calculate the resulting expressions in the case of flat surfaces, a method
leading to an order reduction in computational complexity, is presented.
Results for the interaction of two parallel jellium slabs are shown to agree
with those of a recent RPA calculation (J.F. Dobson and J. Wang, Phys. Rev.
Lett. 82, 2123 1999). The method is easy to use; its input consists of the
electron density of the system, and we show that it can be successfully
approximated by the electron densities of the interacting fragments. Results
for the surface correlation energy of jellium compare very well with those of
other studies. The correlation-interaction energy between two parallel jellia
is calculated for all separations d, and substantial saturation effects are
predicted.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Protonâdonor properties of water and ammonia in van der Waals complexes with rareâgas atoms. KrâH2O and KrâNH3
The perturbation theory of intermolecular forces in conjunction with the supermolecular MøllerâPlesset perturbation theory is applied to the analysis of the potentialâenergy surfaces of KrâH2O and KrâNH3 complexes. The valleylike minimum region on the potentialâenergy surface of KrâH2O ranges from the coplanar geometry with the C2 axis of H2O nearly perpendicular to the OâKr axis (T structure) to the Hâbond structure in which Kr faces the H atom of H2O. Compared to the previously studied ArâH2O [J. Chem. Phys. 94, 2807 (1991)] the minimum has more of the Hâbond character. The minimum for KrâNH3 corresponds to the T structure only, in accordance to the result for ArâNH3 [J. Chem. Phys. 91, 7809 (1989)]. The minima in KrâH2O and KrâNH3 are roughly 27% and 19%, respectively, deeper than for the analogous Ar complexes. To examine the protonâdonor abilities of OâH and NâH bonds the ratios of the deformation energy to dispersion energy are considered. They reflect fundamental differences between the two bonds and explain why NH3 is not capable of forming the Hâbond structures to rareâgas atoms
Protonâdonor properties of water and ammonia in van der Waals complexes. BeâH2O and BeâNH3
The potential energy surfaces (PES) of BeâH2O and BeâNH3 are studied with particular attention to characterization of protonâdonor properties of water and ammonia. Calculations were performed by means of both supermolecular and intermolecular Møller Plesset perturbation theory. The BeâH2O PES reveals two van der Waals minima: the C2v minimum (De=176 cmâ1, Re=6.5 bohr), and the Hâbonded minimum (De=161 cmâ1, Re=7.5 bohr), separated by a barrier of 43 cmâ1 at the Tâshaped configuration. The BeâNH3 PES reveals only one van der Waals minimum, at the C3v configuration (De=260 cmâ1, Re=6.5 bohr) and a saddle point at the Hâbonded geometry. The locations of the minima as well as the anisotropy of the interaction are determined by the anisotropy of electric polarization contribution, embodied by the selfâconsistentâfield (SCF)âdeformation and perturbation induction energies
An analysis of the partial wave expansion of the dispersion energy for Ne2
Calculations of the dispersion energy for Ne2 by using the partial wave expansion through the h=h term were carried out in the region of the van der Waals minimum. It is shown that, at R = 6ag4, lack of higher than d orbitals gives a dispersion energy in error by â16%, and lack of higher than f orbitals gives an error of â6%
Ab initio study of He(1S)+Cl2(Xâ1ÎŁg,3Î u) potential energy surfaces
The potential energy surface of the ground state He+Cl2(1ÎŁg) is calculated by using the perturbation theory of intermolecular forces and supermolecular MøllerâPlesset perturbation theory approach. The potential energy surface of the first excited triplet He+Cl2(3Î u) was evaluated using the supermolecular unrestricted MøllerâPlesset perturbation theory approach. In the ground state two stable isomers are found which correspond to the linear HeâClâCl structure (a primary minimum, De=45.1 cmâ1, Re=4.25 Ă
) and to the Tâshaped structure with He perpendicular to the molecular axis (a secondary minimum, De=40.8 cmâ1, Re=3.5 Ă
). The small difference between these geometries is mainly due to the induction effect which is larger for the linear form. The results obtained for the Tâshaped minimum are in good agreement with the excitation spectroscopy experiments which observed only the Tâshaped form [Beneventi et al., J. Chem. Phys. 98, 178 (1993)]. In the lowest triplet states correlating with Cl2(3Î u), 3AⲠand 3Aâł, the same two isomers correspond to minima. Now, however, the Tâshaped form is lower in energy. The 3AⲠand 3Aâł states correspond to (De,Re) of (19.9 cmâ1, 3.75 Ă
) and (30.3 cmâ1, 3.50 Ă
), respectively, whereas the linear form is characterized by (19.8 cmâ1, 5.0 Ă
). The binding energy for the T form in the lower 3Aâł state is in good agreement with the experimental value of Beneventi et al
Site-Site Function and Successive Reaction Counterpoise Calculation of Basis Set Superposition Error for Proton Transfer
Basis set superposition error (BSSE) is computed for the hydrogen-bonded system (FHâŚF)â by the site-site function (SSFC) and successive reaction counterpoise (SRCP) methods using a wide array of basis sets, at SCF and correlated levels up through MP4. For the complexation process the BSSE can be fairly large. However, as it is comparable in magnitude for the endpoint and midpoint of the proton transfer, the BSSE has only a very small effect upon the barrier to proton transfer for all basis sets. SSFC and SRCP results are generally similar to those obtained with the standard Boys-Bernardi scheme
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