Abstract

Nitrobenzene and Aniline are representatives of the nitro or amino compounds of benzene, mainly used in the manufacture of dyes, spices, medicines, and so on. Extensive use of Nitrobenzene and Aniline may cause pesticide residue pollution and have carcinogenic effects on organisms. In this paper, the Nitrobenzene and Aniline single molecules and their complexes with gold nanoparticles are studied theoretically by Raman spectroscopy, the surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) and the density functional theory (DFT) simulations. Selective binding of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) to the analyte was used to study the molecular electrostatic potential (MEP), frontier molecular orbital (FMO) and the Raman activity spectra of Nitrobenzene and Aniline, as well as the Raman activity spectrum of the complexes. The most electronegative sites of Nitrobenzene and Aniline are found in the MEP and the hypothesis that these sites might be the adsorption sites of Nitrobenzene/Aniline molecules at the gold surface. At the same time, the MEP of the Nitrobenzene/Aniline complexes also prove the existence of the charge transfer effect between Nitrobenzene/Aniline and Au. The FMO energy gap of Nitrobenzene/Aniline is 0.18983 eV and 0.18953 eV, respectively, and which, after adding the Au3 clusters, change to 0.03376 eV and 0.0797 eV, respectively, indicating that the Nitrobenzene/Aniline-Au3 complexes have stronger chemical activities and are more prone to the charge transfer effects. The electrophilic indices of Nitrobenzene (0.17921 eV) and Aniline (0.05635 eV) are calculated and analyzed, as well as that of Nitrobenzene/Aniline-Au3 complexes after adding the Au3 atomic clusters, 0.80819 eV and 0.19819 eV, respectively. The obvious increasing trend in the electrophilic indices of the Nitrobenzene/Aniline-Au3 complexes indicate their stronger biological activities and more prone to chemical reactions. The chemisorption of Nitrobenzene/Aniline and gold nanoparticles complexes is studied by the SERS, and the Raman formation of the complexes at different binding sites of Nitrobenzene/Aniline and Nitrobenzene/Aniline-Au3 is well explained by the surface selection rule. The reason for the selective enhancement of the spectral peaks presented in the Raman activity spectrum is calculated, and the enhancement factor of the chemical enhancement due to the charge transfer effect is calculated as well. The reason for the peak offset in the SERS spectrum to the conventional Raman spectrum is explained.

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