Enticing a Proton using Single Ammonia Molecule as Bait.

J Phys Chem B

Department of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Mumbai 400076, India.

Published: February 2024

In microhydrated acid-solvent clusters, deprotonation of an acid is assisted by a critical number of solvent molecules and a solvent electric field. Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics simulations reveal that trifluoroacetic acid undergoes spontaneous proton transfer in water clusters, with the critical number being five. Acetic acid and phenol, on the other hand, do not dissociate even in the presence of a large number of water molecules (in excess of 40). The addition of a single ammonia molecule to the water cluster, which interacts directly with the protic group, lowers the critical number of solvent water molecules required for proton transfer to three and seven in the case of acetic acid and phenol, respectively. The population of the undissociated and the proton-transferred structures get dispersed to form separate islands on the electric field versus the O-H distance representation with the cusp representing the critical values. The critical electric fields for the spontaneous proton transfer are around 254, 237, and 318 MV cm for trifluoroacetic acid, acetic acid, and phenol, respectively. In the case of phenol, the free energy profiles suggest that proton transfer to the ammonia moiety embedded in water promotes proton transfer efficiently due to the higher basicity of ammonia and enhanced hydrogen bonding network of solvent water, vis-à-vis phenol-ammonia clusters.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.3c06761DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

proton transfer
20
critical number
12
acetic acid
12
acid phenol
12
single ammonia
8
ammonia molecule
8
number solvent
8
electric field
8
trifluoroacetic acid
8
spontaneous proton
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!