Below is a schematic picture of hydrogen bonding between a donor D and an acceptor A.
An interesting and important question is how the potential energy of the system varies with the angle phi which measures deviations from linearity. A key property of H-bonds is that they are highly directional. This leads to the four-fold co-ordination of water in liquid and solid phases.
There is a vibrational mode associated with this co-ordinate phi.
[In water this rotation is connected to the librational mode].
Previously I posted about an empirical correlation showing how this mode hardens with the increasing strength of the H-bond (decreasing R above). This is the opposite trend to the D-H stretch frequency (associated with the r co-ordinate above) which softens with decreasing R.
I was very pleased when I discovered that the model effective Hamiltonian I proposed for H-bonding can describe this correlation (see the figure below) without introducing any new parameters.
This is discussed in more detail in the final version of my paper.
Aside: I earlier posted the graph above in a post about confirmation bias. I should say that after I did get good agreement between the theory and experiment, I did go back and check all the algebra and mathematica codes.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Rodney Baxter (1940-2025): Mathematical Physicist
I recently learnt that Rodney Baxter died earlier this year. He was adept at finding exact solutions to two-dimensional lattice models in st...
-
Is it something to do with breakdown of the Born-Oppenheimer approximation? In molecular spectroscopy you occasionally hear this term thro...
-
This week Nobel Prizes will be announced. I have not done predictions since 2020 . This is a fun exercise. It is also good to reflect on w...
-
Nitrogen fluoride (NF) seems like a very simple molecule and you would think it would very well understood, particularly as it is small enou...


No comments:
Post a Comment