A general method to include electric-field-dependent terms in empirical potential functions representing interatomic interactions is proposed. It is applied to derive an intramolecular potential model for the water molecule able to reproduce the effects of an electric field on its geometry and dynamics: to enlarge the HOH angle, to increase slightly the OH bond lengths, to red-shift the stretching vibrational frequencies, and to blue-shift slightly the bending mode frequency. These effects have been detected experimentally for water adsorbed in zeolites and have been confirmed by quantum mechanical calculations. The electric-field-dependent intramolecular potential model for water has been combined with a newly refined intermolecular potential for bulk water and with new potentials representing cation–water and aluminosilicate–water interactions in order to simulate, by classical molecular dynamics (MD) technique, the behavior of water adsorbed in zeolites. The performances of the model have been checked by a MD simulation of liquid water at room temperature, by the structural and vibrational properties of the water dimer, and by test MD calculations on a hydrated natural zeolite (natrolite). The results are encouraging, and the simulations will be extended to study the behavior of water adsorbed in other zeolites, including diffusion and some aspects of ion exchange processes.

Electric-field-dependent empirical potentials for molecules and crystals: a first application to flexible water molecule adsorbed in zeolites / Demontis, Pierfranco; Cicu, P.; Spanu, Silvano; Tilocca, Antonio; Suffritti, Giuseppe Baldovino. - 112:19(2000), pp. 8267-8278. [10.1063/1.481432]

Electric-field-dependent empirical potentials for molecules and crystals: a first application to flexible water molecule adsorbed in zeolites

Demontis, Pierfranco;Suffritti, Giuseppe Baldovino
2000-01-01

Abstract

A general method to include electric-field-dependent terms in empirical potential functions representing interatomic interactions is proposed. It is applied to derive an intramolecular potential model for the water molecule able to reproduce the effects of an electric field on its geometry and dynamics: to enlarge the HOH angle, to increase slightly the OH bond lengths, to red-shift the stretching vibrational frequencies, and to blue-shift slightly the bending mode frequency. These effects have been detected experimentally for water adsorbed in zeolites and have been confirmed by quantum mechanical calculations. The electric-field-dependent intramolecular potential model for water has been combined with a newly refined intermolecular potential for bulk water and with new potentials representing cation–water and aluminosilicate–water interactions in order to simulate, by classical molecular dynamics (MD) technique, the behavior of water adsorbed in zeolites. The performances of the model have been checked by a MD simulation of liquid water at room temperature, by the structural and vibrational properties of the water dimer, and by test MD calculations on a hydrated natural zeolite (natrolite). The results are encouraging, and the simulations will be extended to study the behavior of water adsorbed in other zeolites, including diffusion and some aspects of ion exchange processes.
2000
Electric-field-dependent empirical potentials for molecules and crystals: a first application to flexible water molecule adsorbed in zeolites / Demontis, Pierfranco; Cicu, P.; Spanu, Silvano; Tilocca, Antonio; Suffritti, Giuseppe Baldovino. - 112:19(2000), pp. 8267-8278. [10.1063/1.481432]
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Cicu_P_Articolo_2000_Electric.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Versione editoriale (versione finale pubblicata)
Licenza: Non specificato
Dimensione 265.22 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
265.22 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11388/262547
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact