Abstract

Vibrational sum-frequency-generation (VSFG) spectroscopy is a versatile technique for probing molecular organization at interfaces. There is a growing recognition that dynamic phenomena, such as reorientation and intermolecular vibrational coupling, can also influence VSFG spectra. The silica/liquid acetonitrile interface is a useful system for exploring these effects in more detail. The organization of acetonitrile at this interface has been well studied, and is known to resemble that of a supported lipid bilayer in many ways. Here isotopic dilution is used to explore the influence of resonant intermolecular coupling of methyl symmetric stretches on the VSFG spectroscopy of this system. VSFG spectra in the methyl stretching region at this interface show a blue shift, a decrease in linewidth, and a higher-than-expected intensity upon dilution in deuterated acetonitrile. We demonstrate that resonant coupling influences VSFG spectral shifts through the infrared transition. Using molecular simulations, we show that our experimental observations are consistent with resonant coupling between methyl transition dipoles being a significant, but not the dominant, contribution to the observed spectral shift upon isotopic dilution. Furthermore, our molecular simulations demonstrate that resonant coupling accounts partially for changes in linewidth and intensity. These classical molecular dynamics simulations also elucidate the behavior of the isotropic Raman spectrum in the bulk liquid upon isotopic dilution. We further simulate the resonant coupling among cyano stretches in this system. These simulations match the experimental shift due to the Raman non-coincidence effect shift of the CN stretch in the bulk liquid, but suggest that the corresponding resonant-coupling-induced shift in the VSFG spectrum at the silica interface is minimal. Our experimental and simulation results indicate that proximity to an interface can cause substantial changes in the resonant coupling of vibrations in a liquid.

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