Structure of NaI ion pairs in water clusters

Citation
Gh. Peslherbe et al., Structure of NaI ion pairs in water clusters, CHEM PHYS, 258(2-3), 2000, pp. 201-224
Citations number
83
Categorie Soggetti
Physical Chemistry/Chemical Physics
Journal title
CHEMICAL PHYSICS
ISSN journal
03010104 → ACNP
Volume
258
Issue
2-3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
201 - 224
Database
ISI
SICI code
0301-0104(20000815)258:2-3<201:SONIPI>2.0.ZU;2-#
Abstract
The structural properties of the thermodynamically stable NaI salt ion pair s in water clusters have been investigated by means of Monte Carlo simulati ons with model potentials. Attention was also paid to the structure of sing le ion-water Na+(H2O)(n) and I-(H2O)(n) clusters, which are found to be non -spherically symmetric at room temperature. In agreement with earlier studi es, I-(H2O)(n) clusters exhibit surface structures, with the "hydrophobic" iodide ion sitting at the surface of a water network, while room-temperatur e Na+(H2O)(n) clusters exhibit a solvation shell structure, where solvent m olecules beyond the first solvation shell tend to accumulate on one side of the cluster instead of forming a spherical droplet. Both "contact" ion pai rs (CIP) and solvent-separated ion pairs (SSIP) are found to have surface s tructures for the smaller clusters while both interior and surface structur es may exist at room temperature for cluster size of 32, A remarkable Featu re of the ion pair cluster structural properties is that they are very much akin to those for individual ion-water clusters, especially for SSIPs, and some insight into the ion pair cluster structures can thus be gained from single ion-water cluster structures. We propose that the (small) extent of solvent-solvent hydrogen bonding and the magnitude of the (large) solvent d ipole moments in the clusters can be used to illustrate the extent of the p erturbation introduced by the ions or the ion pairs in the solvent environm ents. In contrast to the ion pair free energetics investigated in previous work, ion-water and salt-water cluster structural properties are rather ins ensitive to the choice of model potentials, whether one employs non-polariz able optimized potentials for liquid simulations (OPLS) such as TIP4P/OPLS or polarizable optimized potentials for cluster simulations. The structure of NaI(H2O)(n) CIP and SSIP clusters have implications for the NaI(H2O)(n) cluster photodissociation dynamics. The large solvent dipole moments obtain ed for NaI(H2O)(n) clusters are indicative of increasingly larger local sol vent dipoles in the clusters, which may then grow large enough to dipole-bi nd an electron upon cluster photoexcitation. Photoexcitation of the larger clusters might then proceed via a different route than it does for the smal l clusters and isolated NaI possibly involving a charge-transfer-to-solvent excited state akin to that of I-(H2O)(n) clusters. For the NaI photodissoc iation pathway, the surface structure of the small NaI(H2O)(n) clusters may imply a slow change in the reaction dynamics with cluster size. (C) 2000 E lsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.