Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/21642
Title: Quantum Vibrational Dynamics of Molecular Species Relevant to Atmospheric Chemistry and ClimateScience. Formic Acid and its Clusters with Benzene
Authors: Manevska, Verce
Koteska, Bojana 
Mishev, Anastas 
Pejov, LJupcho 
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Society of Chemists and Technologists of Macedonia
Source: Verce Manevska, Bojana Koteska, Anastas Mishev, and Ljupco Pejov. “Quantum Vibra- tional Dynamics of Molecular Species Relevant to Atmospheric Chemistry and Climate Science. Formic Acid and its Clusters with Benzene”. In: XXIV Congress of Chemists and Technologists of Macedonia. Society of Chemists and Technologists of Macedonia. Ohrid, Macedonia, 2016.
Conference: XXIV Congress of Chemists andTechnologists of Macedonia. Society of Chemists and Technologists of Macedonia
Abstract: Vibrational dynamics of formic acid and its noncovalenly bonded complexes with benzene was studied at series of finite temperatures mimicking atmospheric conditions, as well as in the limit of 0 K. Potential energy surfaces (PES) of bare formic acid as well as of its binary noncovalent clusters with benzene were explored employing density functional theory and many-body perturbation theory. Anharmonic OH stretching frequencies of cis- and trans- conformers of formic acid at 0 K were calculated by computing the corresponding anharmonic adiabatic vibrational potentials and subsequently numerically solving the vibrational Schrödinger equations. Similar computations were carried out for the minima located on the benzene – formic acid PESs. The corresponding vibrational frequency shifts with respect to the free monomeric species were compared to the available experimental data. The dynamics of cis → trans and reverse interchange was studied on the basis of computed fully relaxed torsional potentials at the mentioned theoretical levels employing WKB semiclassical methodology. To study the finite-temperature effects on the inter- and intramolecular vibrational dynamics of the studied species, a series of ab initio molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were carried out, employing both Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics (BOMD) as well as the atom-centered density matrix propagation scheme (ADMP). All ab initio MD simulations were performed in the NVE ensemble. In parallel, for comparison purposes, also a series of classical Monte Carlo (MC) simulations were performed, using Coulomb + Lennard-Jones interaction potentials. Vibrational spectroscopic properties of monomeric and noncovalently bonded dimeric species were elucidated from dynamical simulations analyzing the corresponding time- correlation functions, i.e. employing time-series analytic methods. For that purpose, both velocity autocorrelation function as well as the atomic position autocorrelation function was computed and subsequently Fourier-transformed. The differences between “static” and dynamic vibrational spectra were noted and discussed.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/21642
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Computer Science and Engineering: Conference papers

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