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Evolution of vibrational bands upon gradual protonation/deprotonation of arsinic acid H 2 As(O)OH in media of different polarity.

Elena Yu TupikinaVladislav O KorostelevDanil V KrutinPeter M Tolstoy
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2023)
This computational work is devoted to the investigation (MP2/def2-TZVP) of the geometry and IR parameters of arsinic acid H 2 AsOOH and its hydrogen-bonded complexes under vacuum and in media with different polarity. The medium effects were accounted for in two ways: (1) implicitly, using the IEFPCM model, varying the dielectric permittivity ( ε ) and (2) explicitly, by considering hydrogen-bonded complexes of H 2 As(O)OH with various hydrogen bond donors (41 complexes) or acceptors (38 complexes), imitating a gradual transition to the As(OH) 2 + or AsO 2 - moiety, respectively. It was shown that the transition from vacuum to a medium with ε > 1 causes the As(O)OH fragment to lose its flatness. The solvent polar medium introduces significant changes in the geometry and IR spectral parameters of hydrogen-bonded complexes too: as the polarity of a medium increases, weak hydrogen bonds become weaker, and strong and medium hydrogen bonds become stronger; in the case of a complex with two hydrogen bonds cooperativity effects are observed. In almost all cases the driving force of these changes appears to be preferential solvation of charge-separated structures. In the limiting case of complete deprotonation (or conversely complete protonation) the vibrational frequencies of ν AsO and ν As-O turn into ν As-O (asym) and ν As-O (sym), respectively. In the intermediate cases the distance between ν AsO and ν As-O is sensitive to both implicit solvation and explicit solvation and the systematic changes of this distance can be used for estimation of the degree of proton transfer within the hydrogen bond.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • ionic liquid
  • visible light
  • molecular dynamics
  • computed tomography
  • single molecule
  • density functional theory
  • quantum dots
  • optical coherence tomography
  • solar cells
  • electron transfer