JPC Abstract
Abstract
The structural, dynamical and electronic properties of ionic defects
in liquid ammonia at 260 K created by the addition or removal of a proton
have been studied using the method of ab initio molecular dynamics.
These protonic defects correspond to the
ammonium (NH4+)
and amide (NH2-) ions in the liquid and
are the analogs of the H3O+
and OH- ions in
water. For this reason, direct comparison between the protonic defects
in ammonia and those in water can be made. In particular, it is found that
the NH4+ exhibits a characteristic cationic solvation pattern, in which
it donates four hydrogen bonds to neighboring ammonia molecules, giving it
a coordination number of 4. The (NH2- ion is found to have a coordination number between
7 and 8 in liquid ammonia, a number higher than would be expected based on the
number of hydrogen bonds it can accept and donate. It is found that
about 40% of this is due to hydrogen bonding but that these hydrogen bonds
are all accepted by the amide nitrogen. Moreover, the hydrogen bonds
form are often arranged in a planar configuration (perpendicular to the C2
axis of the amide), a solvation pattern also exhibited by
OH- in water.
The rationale for the high coordination of NH2-
is found to differ
markedly from that which emerges from interpretation of spectral data.
Unlike H3O+ and OH-
in water, no proton transfer is exhibited in either the
NH4+
or the NH2- systems. The results presented here lead to a possible explanation
for the lack of structural diffusion. Nevertheless, the solvation structures
formed by the NH4+ and NH2- ions in ammonia and their associated electronic
properties possess many similarities with the water ions in water, and from the studies
performed here, a number of important patterns begin to emerge that may
be applicable to protonic defects in other hydrogen-bonded liquids.