Abstract
It was recently suggested that 2-aminooxazole (AO) could contribute to the formation of RNA nucleotides on primitive earth. In this article we have considered by means of computational modeling the influence of microhydration on the structural and spectral properties of this potential prebiotic molecule. The stable structures of AO(H2O)n were obtained first by sampling the potential energy landscapes of clusters containing up to n = 20 water molecules, using a simple but reasonably accurate force field and replica-exchange molecular dynamics simulations. Through reoptimization using an explicit description of electronic structure at the level of density functional theory with the M06-2X functional, the formation energies, ionization energies and electron affinities were determined in the vertical and adiabatic treatments, as well as vibrational and optical spectra covering the far-IR, mid-IR, and lower part of the UV ranges. The results generally show a clear segregation between the aminooxazole solute and the water molecules, a water cluster being formed near the nitrogen and amino group side leaving the hydrocarbon side dry even at temperatures corresponding to the liquid state. The spectral signatures generally concur and show distinct contributions of the solute and solvent, spectral shifts to lower energies being in agreement with earlier calculations in bulk solvent. We have also investigated the importance of microhydration on the charge transfer cross section upon collision with a proton, thereby extending an earlier investigation on the bare AO molecule. The presence of water molecules generally reduces the propensity for charge transfer at small sizes, but the influence of the solvent steadily decreases in larger droplets.
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