Theoretical Study on the
Structure and Stabilities
of Molecular Clusters of Oxalic Acid with Water
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Abstract
The importance of aerosols to humankind is well-known,
playing
an integral role in determining Earth’s climate and influencing
human health. Despite this fact, much remains unknown about the initial
events of nucleation. In this work, the molecular properties of common
organic atmospheric pollutant oxalic acid and its gas phase interactions
with water have been thoroughly examined. Local minima single-point
energies for the monomer conformations were calculated at the B3LYP
and MP2 level of theory with both 6-311++G(d,p) and aug-cc-pVDZ basis
sets and are compared with previous works. Optimized geometries, relative
energies, and free energy changes for the stable clusters of oxalic
acid conformers with up to six waters were then obtained from B3LYP
calculations with 6-31+G(d) and 6-311++G(d,p) basis sets. Initially,
cooperative binding is predicted to be the most important factor in
nucleation, but as the clusters grow, dipole cancellations are found
to play a pivotal role. The clusters of oxalic acid hydrated purely
with water tend to produce extremely stable and neutral core systems.
Free energies of formation and atmospheric implications are discussed