Most cited article - PubMed ID 18507365
Emergence of charge-transfer-to-solvent band in the absorption spectra of hydrogen halides on ice nanoparticles: spectroscopic evidence for acidic dissociation
ConspectusPhotochemical reactions have always been the source of a great deal of mystery. While classified as a type of chemical reaction, no doubts are allowed that the general tenets of ground-state chemistry do not directly apply to photochemical reactions. For a typical chemical reaction, understanding the critical points of the ground-state potential (free) energy surface and embedding them in a thermodynamics framework is often enough to infer reaction yields or characteristic time scales. A general working principle is that the energy profile along the minimum energy paths provides the key information to characterize the reaction. These well-developed concepts, unfortunately, rarely stretch to processes involving the formation of a nonstationary state for a molecular system after light absorption.Upon photoexcitation, a molecule is likely to undergo internal conversion processes, that is, changes of electronic states mediated by couplings between nuclear and electronic motion, precisely what the celebrated Born-Oppenheimer approximation neglects. These coupled electron-nuclear processes, coined nonadiabatic processes, allow for the molecule to decay from one electronic state to the other nonradiatively. Understanding the intricate nonadiabatic dynamics is pivotal to rationalizing and predicting the outcome of a molecular photoexcitation and providing insights for experiments conducted, for example, in advanced light sources such as free-electron lasers.Nowadays, most simulations in nonadiabatic molecular dynamics are based on approximations that invoke a near-classical depiction of the nuclei. This reliance is due to practical constraints, and the classical equations of motion for the nuclei must be supplemented by techniques such as surface hopping to account for nonadiabatic transitions between electronic states. A critical but often overlooked aspect of these simulations is the selection of initial conditions, specifically the choice of initial nuclear positions and momenta for the nonadiabatic dynamics, which can significantly influence how well the simulations mimic real quantum systems across various experimental scenarios. The conventional approach for generating initial conditions for nonadiabatic dynamics typically maps the initial state onto a nuclear phase space using a Wigner quasiprobability function within a harmonic approximation, followed by a second approximation where the molecule undergoes a sudden excitation.In this Account, we aim to warn the experienced or potential user of nonadiabatic molecular dynamics about the possible limitations of this strategy for initial-condition generation and its inability to accurately describe the photoexcitation of a molecule. More specifically, we argue that the initial phase-space distribution can be more accurately represented through molecular dynamics simulations by using a quantum thermostat. This method offers a robust framework that can be applied to large, flexible, or even solvated molecular systems. Furthermore, the reliability of this strategy can be benchmarked against more rigorous approaches such as path integral molecular dynamics. Additionally, the commonly used sudden approximation, which assumes a vertical and sudden excitation of a molecule, rarely reflects the excitation triggered by laser pulses used in actual photochemical and spectroscopic experiments. We discuss here a more general approach that can generate initial conditions for any type of laser pulse. We also discuss strategies to tackle excitation triggered by a continuous-wave laser.
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
Clusters in molecular beam experiments can mimic aerosol nanoclusters and provide molecular-level details for various processes relevant to atmospheric aerosol research. Aerosol nanoclusters, particles of sizes below 10 nm, are difficult to investigate in ambient atmosphere and thus represent a gap in our understanding of the new particle formation process. Recent field measurements and laboratory experiments are closing this gap; however, experiments with clusters in molecular beams are rarely involved. Yet, they can offer an unprecedented detailed insight into the processes including particles in this size range. In this Perspective, we discuss several up-to-date molecular beam experiments with clusters and demonstrate that the investigated clusters approach aerosol nanoclusters in terms of their complexity and chemistry. We examine remaining gaps between atmospheric aerosols and clusters in molecular beams and speculate about future experiments bridging these gaps.
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Review MeSH
THIS REVIEW SUMMARIZES SOME RECENT EXPERIMENTS WITH ICE NANOPARTICLES (LARGE WATER CLUSTERS) IN MOLECULAR BEAMS AND OUTLINES THEIR ATMOSPHERIC RELEVANCE: (1) Investigation of mixed water-nitric acid particles by means of the electron ionization and sodium doping combined with photoionization revealed the prominent role of HNO3 molecule as the condensation nuclei. (2) The uptake of atmospheric molecules by water ice nanoparticles has been studied, and the pickup cross sections for some molecules exceed significantly the geometrical sizes of the ice nanoparticles. (3) Photodissociation of hydrogen halides on water ice particles has been shown to proceed via excitation of acidically dissociated ion pair and subsequent biradical generation and H3O dissociation. The photodissociation of CF2Cl2 molecules in clusters is also mentioned. Possible atmospheric consequences of all these results are briefly discussed.
- Keywords
- aerosols, atmospheric chemistry, molecular beams, molecular dynamics, photochemistry, photodissociation, water clusters,
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Review MeSH