Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.116, No.1, 399-414, 2012
Influence of Water on Anharmonicity, Stability, and Vibrational Energy Distribution of Hydrogen-Bonded Adducts in Atmospheric Reactions: Case Study of the OH plus Isoprene Reaction Intermediate Using Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics
The effect of water on the stability and vibrational states of a hydroxy-isoprene adduct is probed through the introduction of 1-15 water molecules. It is found that when a static nuclear harmonic approximation is invoked there is a substantial red shift of the alcohol O-H stretch (of the order of 800 cm(-1)) as a result of introduction of water. When potential energy surface sampling and associated anharmonicities are introduced through finite temperature ab initio, dynamics, this hydroxy-isoprene OH stretch strongly couples with all the water vibrational modes as well as the hydroxy-isoprene, OH bend modes. A new computational technique is introduced to probe the coupling between these modes. The method involves a two-dimensional, time-frequency analysis of the finite temperature vibrational properties. Such an analysis not only provides information about the modes that are coupled as a result of finite-temperature analysis, but also the temporal evolution of such coupling.