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Double proton transfer in hydrated formic acid dimer: Interplay of spatial symmetry and solvent-generated force on reactivity.

Kai TöpferSilvan KäserMarkus Meuwly
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2022)
The double proton transfer (DPT) reaction in the hydrated formic acid dimer (FAD) is investigated at molecular-level detail. For this, a global and reactive machine learned (ML) potential energy surface (PES) is developed to run extensive (more than 100 ns) mixed ML/MM molecular dynamics (MD) simulations in explicit molecular mechanics (MM) solvent at MP2-quality for the solute. Simulations with fixed - as in a conventional empirical force field - and conformationally fluctuating - as available from the ML-based PES - charge models for FAD show a significant impact on the competition between DPT and dissociation of FAD into two formic acid monomers. With increasing temperature the barrier height for DPT in solution changes by about 10% (∼1 kcal mol -1 ) between 300 K and 600 K. The rate for DPT is largest, ∼1 ns -1 , at 350 K and decreases for higher temperatures due to destabilisation and increased probability for dissociation of FAD. The water solvent is found to promote the first proton transfer by exerting a favourable solvent-induced Coulomb force along the O-H⋯O hydrogen bond whereas the second proton transfer is significantly controlled by the O-O separation and other conformational degrees of freedom. Double proton transfer in hydrated FAD is found to involve a subtle interplay and balance between structural and electrostatic factors.
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