Login / Signup

The Near-Sightedness of Many-Body Interactions in Anharmonic Vibrational Couplings.

Ryan J SpencerAsylbek A ZhanserkeevEmily L YangRyan P Steele
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Couplings between vibrational motions are driven by electronic interactions, and these couplings carry special significance in vibrational energy transfer, multidimensional spectroscopy experiments, and simulations of vibrational spectra. In this investigation, the many-body contributions to these couplings are analyzed computationally in the context of clathrate-like alkali metal cation hydrates, including Cs + (H 2 O) 20 , Rb + (H 2 O) 20 , and K + (H 2 O) 20 , using both analytic and quantum-chemistry potential energy surfaces. Although the harmonic spectra and one-dimensional anharmonic spectra depend strongly on these many-body interactions, the mode-pair couplings were, perhaps surprisingly, found to be dominated by one-body effects, even in cases of couplings to low-frequency modes that involved the motion of multiple water molecules. The origin of this effect was traced mainly to geometric distortion within water monomers and cancellation of many-body effects in differential couplings, and the effect was also shown to be agnostic to the identity of the ion. These outcomes provide new understanding of vibrational couplings and suggest the possibility of improved computational methods for the simulation of infrared and Raman spectra.
Keyphrases