Water Network Shape-Dependence of Local Interactions with the Microhydrated -NO2-and -CO2-Anionic Head Groups by Cold Ion Vibrational Spectroscopy
- Sayoni Mitraa(Author),
- Joanna K. Dentona(Author),
- Patrick J. Kellehera(Author),
- Mark A. Johnsona(Author),
- ,
- Tae Hoon Choib(Author)
- aYale University,
- bUniversity of Pittsburgh,
- cMillikin University
Abstract
We report the structural evolutions of water networks and solvatochromic response of the CH3NO2-radical anion in the OH and CH stretching regions by analysis of the vibrational spectra displayed by cryogenically cooled CH3NO2-·(H2O)n=1-6clusters. The OH stretching bands evolve with a surprisingly large discontinuity at n = 6, which features the emergence of an intense, strongly red-shifted band along with a weaker feature that appears in the region assigned to a free OH fundamental. Very similar behavior is displayed by the perdeuterated carboxylate clusters, RCO2-·(H2O)n=5-7(R = CD3CD2), indicating that this behavior is a general feature in the microhydration of the triatomic anionic domain and not associated with CH oscillators. Electronic structure calculations trace this behavior to the formation of a "book" isomer of the water hexamer that adopts a configuration in which one of the water molecules resides in an acceptor-acceptor-donor (AAD) (A = acceptor, D = donor) H-bonding site. Excitation of the bound OH in the AAD site explores the local network topology best suited to stabilize an incipient -XO2H-OH-(H2O)2intracluster proton-transfer reaction. These systems thus provide particularly clear examples where the network shape controls the potential energy landscape that governs water network-mediated, intracluster proton transfer. The CH stretching bands of the CH3NO2-·(H2O)n=1-6clusters also exhibit strong solvatochromic shifts, but in this case, they smoothly blue-shift with increasing hydration with no discontinuity at n = 6. This behavior is analyzed in the context of the solute-ion polarizability response and partial charge transfer to the water networks.
