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Observation of Isomer Trapping in Li + (H 2 O) 4 Ar Cluster Ions Dorothy J. Miller and James M. Lisy Department of Chemistry University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
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Triple Quadrapole Mass Spectrometer Neutral water clusters are formed via a supersonic expansion. Fully expanded neutral clusters collide with lithium cations produced via thermionic emission. Clusters are cooled through the evaporative loss of the most labile species, there is no collisional cooling. Tandem MS-MS method: Select parent ion cluster, dissociate with IR radiation, detect fragment cluster ion. Indirect action/depletion Source lenses Detector lenses Cross beam ion gun Ion selecting quadrupole Ion analyzing quadrupole Ion guiding quadrupole CD/CEM Nozzle Nd 3+ :YAG Laser (1064 nm) 20 ns pulse 20 Hz Tunable LiNbO 3 OPO
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n-m n- 2 n- 1 n E final = E n-(m-1) - KE n-(m-1) -BE n- (m-1) E n-2 =E n-1 -KE n-1 - BE n-1 E n-1 =E n -KE n - BE n Evaporative Cooling Cooling efficiency determined by the evaporating ligands’ binding energy Assume statistical energy distribution effective cluster ion temperature E final [Li + (H 2 O) 4 ] Energy Δ E ≈ BE H2O E n [Li + (H 2 O) n ] 0- Δ E ≈ BE Ar E final [Li + (H 2 O) 4 Ar] E n [Li + (H 2 O) 4 Ar n ] 0- Energy Terminal temperature ~100 K H 2 O evap. = larger energy loss Terminal temperature ~400 K Ar evap. = smaller energy loss
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Why is knowledge of the effective cluster temperature important? Gas-phase ion clusters are used to model biological, biochemical, and chemical systems Biological temperature range ~250 – 300 K Room temperature 298 K Cluster ions can retain significant internal energy when binding energies are high B.E. Li + (H 2 O) 3 ···H 2 O 66.8 kJ/mol Structures/configurations may vary with internal energy Higher temps may lead to entropically favored isomers and low temperatures favor the global minimum isomer
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Internal Energy Simulation Internal energy-dependant evaporation rates are calculated using RRKM theory RRKM rates are used to simulate total internal energy population distributions and relative fragmentation in the evaporative ensemble Internal energy distributions and vibrational frequencies are used to estimate the cluster ion temperature The molecular partition function and changes in free energy are calculated from ab initio energy and frequency calculations
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Free Energy Ordering of Li + (H 2 O) 4 Δ G (kJ/mol) Temperature (K) Li + (H 2 O) 4 ΔE eq ΔE ZPE (3+1) linear16.017.7 (3+1) bent4.5410.8 (4+0)00 MP2/aug-cc-pVDZ
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Li + (H 2 O) 4 Evaporation of Water Experimental spectrum best agrees with the calculated spectrum for the tetrahedral nonhydrogen-bonded isomer RRKM-EE temperature ~400K MP2/aug-cc-pVDZ
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Δ G (kJ/mol) Temperature (K) Li + (H 2 O) 4 Ar ΔE eq ΔE ZPE (3+1) linear14.516.0 (3+1) bent3.89.7 (4+0)00 MP2/aug-cc-pVDZ Free Energy Ordering of Li + (H 2 O) 4 Ar
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Experimental spectrum best agrees with that calculated for the bent hydrogen- bonded isomer RRKM-EE temperature ~100K Li + (H 2 O) 4 Ar Evaporation of Argon MP2/aug-cc-pVDZ
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Li + (H 2 O) 4 – The effect of argon Frequency (cm -1 ) IRPD Cross Section (cm 2 ) Li + (H 2 O) 4 Li + (H 2 O) 4 Ar
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Calculations ≠ Experiment Preliminary ion approach calculations indicate that there is a low (or no) barrier going from Li + ···(H 2 O) 4 to the bent hydrogen-bonded isomer Cluster ions are formed by impacting an ion into a fully formed neutral cluster cyclic water four MP2/aug-cc-pVDZ
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No collisional cooling, only evaporative cooling tetrahedral isomer not formed after ion impact To form the tetrahedral 4+0 isomer, two hydrogen bonds must be broken Cluster Rearrangement Barrier ~30 kJ/mol B.E. Li + (H 2 O) 4 ···Ar ~ 3.8 kJ/mol No collisional cooling, only evaporative cooling tetrahedral isomer not formed after ion impact Mass select Li + (H 2 O) 4 Ar clusters Once in the bent conformation, insufficient internal energy to overcome the rearrangement barriers MP2/aug-cc-pVDZ
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Conclusions Neither ab initio or thermodynamic calculations predict that the Li + (H 2 O) 4 Ar (3+1 bent) isomer should be observed 4+0 tetrahedral isomer is predicted at all temperatures Dynamic “trapping” may play a role Low or no barrier to form the 3+1 bent isomer from Li + ···(H 2 O) 4 Large (~30 kJ/mol) barrier to cluster rearrangement Rapid argon cooling is trapping the higher energy conformer in the molecular beam
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Acknowledgements The Lisy Group: Jason Rodriguez, Matthew Ackerman, Amy Willmarth, Jordan Beck and James Lisy Timothy Vaden Hanneli Hudock NCSA support staff $$ UIUC Block Grant National Science Foundation ACS-PRF
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Connection between hydrated ions and condensed phase (solutions) Mass-selectivity allows probing of size- and composition-dependences With no heat bath, knowledge of internal energy distribution (‘temperature’) is key Structures/configurations may vary with internal energy Balance of competing intermolecular forces can reflect energetic and entropic factors
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Rearrangement Barriers Barrier ~30 kJ/mol Mass select Li + (H 2 O) 4 Ar cluster ions Once in the bent conformation, insufficient internal energy to overcome the rearrangement barriers MP2/aug-cc-pVDZ B.E. Li+(H2O)4···Ar ~ 3.8 kJ/mol
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