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Water inertial reorientation: Hydrogen bond strength and the angular potential

  1. David E. Moilanen *,
  2. Emily E. Fenn *,
  3. Yu-Shan Lin ,
  4. J. L. Skinner ,
  5. B. Bagchi * , , and
  6. Michael D. Fayer * , §
  1. *Department of Chemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305; and
  2. Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706
  1. Contributed by Michael D. Fayer, February 19, 2008 (received for review January 23, 2008)

Abstract

The short-time orientational relaxation of water is studied by ultrafast infrared pump-probe spectroscopy of the hydroxyl stretching mode (OD of dilute HOD in H2O). The anisotropy decay displays a sharp drop at very short times caused by inertial orientational motion, followed by a much slower decay that fully randomizes the orientation. Investigation of temperatures from 1°C to 65°C shows that the amplitude of the inertial component (extent of inertial angular displacement) depends strongly on the stretching frequency of the OD oscillator at higher temperatures, although the slow component is frequency-independent. The inertial component becomes frequency-independent at low temperatures. At high temperatures there is a correlation between the amplitude of the inertial decay and the strength of the O-DGraphicO hydrogen bond, but at low temperatures the correlation disappears, showing that a single hydrogen bond (ODGraphicO) is no longer a significant determinant of the inertial angular motion. It is suggested that the loss of correlation at lower temperatures is caused by the increased importance of collective effects of the extended hydrogen bonding network. By using a new harmonic cone model, the experimentally measured amplitudes of the inertial decays yield estimates of the characteristic frequencies of the intermolecular angular potential for various strengths of hydrogen bonds. The frequencies are in the range of ≈400 cm−1. A comparison with recent molecular dynamics simulations employing the simple point charge-extended water model at room temperature shows that the simulations qualitatively reflect the correlation between the inertial decay and the OD stretching frequency.

Footnotes

  • §To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: fayer{at}stanford.edu
  • Author contributions: D.E.M., Y.-S.L., J.L.S., B.B., and M.D.F. designed research; D.E.M., E.E.F., Y.-S.L., J.L.S., and B.B. performed research; D.E.M., E.E.F., Y.-S.L., J.L.S., B.B., and M.D.F. analyzed data; and D.E.M. and M.D.F. wrote the paper.

  • Present address: Solid State and Structural Chemistry Unit, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore 560 012, India.

  • The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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