18 research outputs found
PHOTOINITIATED H-ATOM REACTIONS IN CO2-HBR COMPLEXES
Photoinitiated reactions of H atoms with CO2 in CO2-HBr complexes have been examined by using ab initio generalized valence bond-configuration interaction calculations. Recent experiments have shown that CO2-HBr complexes yield OH approximately 40 times more efficiently than CO2-HCl complexes for similar values of h-nu-D0(HX). We find that the calculated equilibrium geometry for the T-shaped CO2-HBr complex is in excellent agreement with the experimental geometry, which is inertially asymmetric with the Br-C line almost perpendicular to the CO2 axis and the H-Br bond nearly parallel to the CO2 molecular axis. We find a linear isomer of CO2-HBr to also be stable; this species has not been observed experimentally. We find that photoexcitation of the T-shaped HBr moiety leads to two directly dissociative excited states of A' and A" symmetries. For both states, the HBr bond expands rapidly following photoexcitation with most H atoms leaving unreactively from the complex. However, for those H atoms that approach CO2 and form HOCO, the two excited states show dissimilar interactions due to interaction of the Br atom with HOCO. The A' state has a weak in-plane bonding interaction between the Br p orbital and the C radical orbital of HOCO, whereas the A" state leads to repulsion. These results are consistent with the experimental observations and underscore the greater variety possible in such relations taking place in complexes vs under single-collision, gas-phase conditions.X1133sciescopu
Quantum-chemical calculations of dye-sensitized semiconductor nanocrystals
Quantum chemical calculations providing detailed information of dye-sensitized semiconductor nanocrystals are presented. The calculations are used to elucidate both structural and electronic properties of photoelectrochemical devices, such as environmentally friendly Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells (DSSCs), at the molecular level. Quantum chemical calculations have recently been performed on both organic and organometallic dye molecules attached to titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanocrystals via different anchor and spacer groups. Strategies to make accurate quantum chemical calculations, e.g. at the DFT level of theory, on increasingly realistic models of such dye-sensitized semiconductor interfaces are presented. The ability of different anchor and spacer groups to act as mediators of ultrafast photo-induced electron injection from the dye molecules into the semiconductor nanocrystals is, in particular, discussed in terms of calculated electronic coupling strengths, and direct comparisons with experimental information are made whenever possible. Progress in the development of multi-scale simulation techniques using so called reactive force fields is illustrated for dye-sensitized solar cell systems
Predictions of melting, crystallization, and local atomic arrangements of aluminum clusters using a reactive force field
A parametrized reactive force field model for aluminum ReaxFFAl has been developed based on density functional theory (DFT) data. A comparison has been made between DFT and ReaxFFAl outputs to ascertain whether ReaxFFAl is properly parametrized and to check if the output of the latter has correlation with DFT results. Further checks include comparing the equations of state of condensed phases of Al as calculated from DFT and ReaxFFAl. There is a good match between the two results, again showing that ReaxFFAl is correctly parametrized as per the DFT input. Simulated annealing has been performed on aluminum clusters Aln using ReaxFFAl to find the stable isomers of the clusters. A plot of stability function versus cluster size shows the existence of highly stable clusters (magic clusters). Quantum mechanically these magic clusters arise due to the complete filling of the orbital shells. However, since force fields do not care about electrons but work on the assumption of validity of Born-Oppenheimer approximation, the magic clusters are therefore correlated with high structural symmetry. There is a rapid decline in surface energy contribution due to the triangulated nature of the surface atoms leading to higher coordination number. The bulk binding energy is computed to be 76.8 kcal/mol. This gives confidence in the suitability of ReaxFF for studying and understanding the underlying dynamics in aluminum clusters. In the quantification of the growth of cluster it is seen that as the size of the clusters increase there is preference for the coexistence of fcc/hcp orders at the expense of simple icosahedral ordering, although there is some contribution from distorted icosahedral ordering. It is found that even for aluminum clusters with 512 atoms distorted icosahedral ordering exists. For clusters with N=256 atoms fcc ordering dominates, which implies that at this point we are already on the threshold of bulklike bonding. © 2008 American Institute of Physics
Predictions of melting, crystallization, and local atomic arrangements of aluminum clusters using a reactive force field
A parametrized reactive force field model for aluminum ReaxFFAl has been developed based on density functional theory (DFT) data. A comparison has been made between DFT and ReaxFFAl outputs to ascertain whether ReaxFFAl is properly parametrized and to check if the output of the latter has correlation with DFT results. Further checks include comparing the equations of state of condensed phases of Al as calculated from DFT and ReaxFFAl. There is a good match between the two results, again showing that ReaxFFAl is correctly parametrized as per the DFT input. Simulated annealing has been performed on aluminum clusters Aln using ReaxFFAl to find the stable isomers of the clusters. A plot of stability function versus cluster size shows the existence of highly stable clusters (magic clusters). Quantum mechanically these magic clusters arise due to the complete filling of the orbital shells. However, since force fields do not care about electrons but work on the assumption of validity of Born-Oppenheimer approximation, the magic clusters are therefore correlated with high structural symmetry. There is a rapid decline in surface energy contribution due to the triangulated nature of the surface atoms leading to higher coordination number. The bulk binding energy is computed to be 76.8 kcal/mol. This gives confidence in the suitability of ReaxFF for studying and understanding the underlying dynamics in aluminum clusters. In the quantification of the growth of cluster it is seen that as the size of the clusters increase there is preference for the coexistence of fcc/hcp orders at the expense of simple icosahedral ordering, although there is some contribution from distorted icosahedral ordering. It is found that even for aluminum clusters with 512 atoms distorted icosahedral ordering exists. For clusters with N=256 atoms fcc ordering dominates, which implies that at this point we are already on the threshold of bulklike bonding. © 2008 American Institute of Physics
Multiscale modeling of interaction of alane clusters on Al(111) surfaces : a reactive force field and infrared absorbtion spectroscopy approach
We have used reactive force field (ReaxFF) to investigate the mechanism of interaction of alanes on Al(111) surface. Our simulations show that, on the Al(111) surface, alanes oligomerize into larger alanes. In addition, from our simulations, adsorption of atomic hydrogen on Al(111) surface leads to the formation of alanes via H-induced etching of aluminum atoms from the surface. The alanes then agglomerate at the step edges forming stringlike conformations. The identification of these stringlike intermediates as a precursor to the bulk hydride phase allows us to explain the loss of resolution in surface IR experiments with increasing hydrogen coverage on single crystal Al(111) surface. This is in excellent agreement with the experimental works of Go et al. [E. Go, K. Thuermer, and J. E. Reutt-Robey, Surf. Sci. 437, 377 (1999)]. The mobility of alanes molecules has been studied using molecular dynamics and it is found that the migration energy barrier of Al2H6 is 2.99 kcal/mol while the prefactor is D0=2.82×10-3 cm2/s. We further investigated the interaction between an alane and an aluminum vacancy using classical molecular dynamics simulations. We found that a vacancy acts as a trap for alane, and eventually fractionates/annihilates it. These results show that ReaxFF can be used, in conjunction with ab initio methods, to study complex reactions on surfaces at both ambient and elevated temperature conditions