Role of Presolvation and Anharmonicity in Aqueous Phase Hydrated Proton Solvation and Transport

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Abstract

Results from condensed phase ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations suggest a proton transfer reaction is facilitated by presolvation in which the hydronium is transiently solvated by four water molecules, similar to the typical solvation structure of water, by accepting a weak hydrogen bond from the fourth water molecule. A new version 3.2 multistate empirical valence bond (MS-EVB 3.2) model for the hydrated excess proton incorporating this presolvation behavior is therefore developed. The classical MS-EVB simulations show similar structural properties as those of the previous model but with significantly improved diffusive behavior. The inclusion of nuclear quantum effects in the MS-EVB also provides an even better description of the proton diffusion rate. To quantify the influence of anharmonicity, a second model (aMS-EVB 3.2) is developed using the anharmonic aSPC/Fw water model, which provides similar structural properties but improved spectroscopic responses at high frequencies.

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Biswas, R., Tse, Y. L. S., Tokmakoff, A., & Voth, G. A. (2016). Role of Presolvation and Anharmonicity in Aqueous Phase Hydrated Proton Solvation and Transport. Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 120(8), 1793–1804. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.5b09466

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