Comparative FTIR spectroscopy of HX adsorbed on solid water: Ragout-jet water clusters vs ice nanocrystal arrays

2005 | journal article???letter_note???. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Comparative FTIR spectroscopy of HX adsorbed on solid water: Ragout-jet water clusters vs ice nanocrystal arrays​
Devlin, J. P.; Farnik, M.; Suhm, M. A.   & Buch, V.​ (2005) 
The Journal of Physical Chemistry A109(6) pp. 955​-958​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/jp044212k 

Documents & Media

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Devlin, J. P.; Farnik, M.; Suhm, Martin A. ; Buch, V.
Abstract
In addition to revealing the stretch-mode bands of the smallest mixed clusters of HCl and HBr (HX) with water, the ragout-jet FTIR spectra of dense mixed water-acid supersonic jets include bands that result from the interaction of HX with larger water clusters. It is argued here that low jet temperatures prevent the water-cluster-bound HX molecules from becoming sufficiently solvated to induce ionic dissociation. The molecular nature of the HX can be deduced directly from the observed influence of changing from HCl to HBr and from replacing H2O with D2O. Furthermore, the band positions of HX are roughly coincidental with bands assigned to molecular HCl and HBr adsorbed on ice nanocrystal surfaces at temperatures below 100 K. It is also interesting that the HX band positions and widths approximate those of HX bound to the surface of amorphous ice films at <60 K. Though computational results suggest the adsorbed HX molecules observed in the jet expansions are weakly distorted by single coordination with surface dangling-oxygen atoms, on-the-fly trajectories indicate that the cluster skeletons undergo large-amplitude low-frequency vibrations. Local HX solvation, the extent of proton sharing, and the HX vibrational spectra undergo serious modulation on a picosecond time scale.
Issue Date
2005
Status
published
Publisher
Amer Chemical Soc
Journal
The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 
Organization
Institut für Physikalische Chemie 
ISSN
1089-5639

Reference

Citations


Social Media