Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.112, No.8, 1694-1700, 2008
Computational studies of liquid water and diluted water in carbon tetrachloride
Molecular dynamics simulations were carried out to study solvent effects on the energetic and dynamical properties of water molecules in liquid water and in carbon tetrachloride (CCl4). In these studies, the free-energy profiles or potentials of mean force (PMF) for water dimers in both solvents were computed. The computed PMF results showed a stable minimum near 3 angstrom for the O-O separation, with a minimum free energy of about -2.8 kcal/mol in CCl4, as compared to a value of -0.5 kcal/mol in liquid water. The difference in free energy in water as compared to that in CCl4 was expected and is the result of competition from surrounding water molecules that are capable of forming hydrogen bonds in the liquid water. This capability is absent in the diluted water found in CCl4. We found that the rotational motions of H2O/D2O were nonisotropic, with the out-of-plane vector correlation times in H2O/D2O varying from 5.6/5.8 ps at 250 K to 0.57/0.56 ps at 350 K and the corresponding OH/OD bond vectors varying from 6.5/7.7 ps to 0.75/0.75 ps. The results compare reasonably well to the available NMR experimental and computer simulation data on the same system (Farrar; Skinner; et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2001, 123, 8047). For diluted water in CCl4, we found the computed rotational correlation times also were nonisotropic and much longer than the corresponding NMR experimental values at the same concentration (Farrar; et al. J. Phys. Chem. A 2007, 111, 6146). Upon analyzing the water hydrogen-bonding patterns as a function of water concentration, we conclude that the differences in the rotational correlation times mainly result from the formation of water hydrogen-bonding networks as the water concentration is increased in liquid CCl4. In addition, we found the rotational correlation times to be substantially faster in liquid CCl4 than in liquid water.