Structural, Thermodynamic, and Spectroscopic Evolution in the Hydration of Copper(II) Ions, Cu 2+ (H 2 O) 2-8 .
Elizabeth G ChristensenRyan P SteelePublished in: The journal of physical chemistry. A (2023)
Gas-phase clusters of the hydrated Cu(II) cation with 2-8 water molecules were investigated using ab initio quantum chemistry. Isomer structures, energies, and vibrational spectra were computed across this size range, yielding a qualitative picture of this ion as an intact Cu 2+ hydrate that also partially oxidizes the surrounding water network at equilibrium. At sufficient cluster sizes, these ion hydrates also become thermodynamically preferred over competitive Cu(II) hydroxide hydrates. Competitive coordination environments were found to exist at some cluster sizes, due to both hydrogen-bonding and d-orbital chemical effects, and the dominant coordination number was found in some cases to be temperature-dependent. Clear spectral signatures of the ion's coordination environment were computed to exist at each cluster size, which should make experimental verification of these computational predictions straightforward. Through comparison to recent studies of hydrated CuOH + , the effective charge on the metal center was shown to converge to approximately +1.5 in both cases, despite qualitatively different behavior of their radical spin densities. Therefore, nominally Cu(II) ions exhibit considerable electronic, chemical, and structural flexibility. The electronic origins of this flexibility─including key roles played by the water network itself─are investigated in this work and should provide a conceptual foundation for future studies of copper-based, water-oxidation catalysts.
Keyphrases
- aqueous solution
- density functional theory
- metal organic framework
- molecular dynamics
- magnetic resonance imaging
- atomic force microscopy
- molecular docking
- quantum dots
- molecular dynamics simulations
- gene expression
- computed tomography
- high resolution
- optical coherence tomography
- single molecule
- nitric oxide
- energy transfer
- diffusion weighted imaging
- gold nanoparticles
- current status
- case control
- high speed
- room temperature