Abstract

The excess electron binding mechanism of the anionic nitromethane-water clusters was theoretically investigated using the potential energy surfaces calculated by high-level electronic structure theories. The mechanism was first studied for the dipole-bound and valence-bound anionic states of the CH(3)NO(2)(-) monomer with the ab initio multireference configuration interaction method to reveal the electron transformation process between these anionic states in detail. As a result, it was found that both the NO(2) tilting angle and NO distances play an essential role in this electron transformation. Following this result, various water solvation structures of the valence-bound CH(3)NO(2)(-) anion were optimized with up to six water solvents using the second-order Møller-Plesset (MP2) method. The calculated results predicted that the vertical detachment energy of the valence-bound CH(3)NO(2)(-) anion increases gradually with the hydration number, as is consistent with recent experimental observations. We also investigated metastable complexes composed of CH(3)NO(2) and (H(2)O)(6)(-) by using the MP2 and long-range corrected density functional theory calculations. Two types of dipole-bound forms were obtained for the [CH(3)NO(2).(H(2)O)(6)] anion complex. In one form the excess electron is internally suspended between the two moieties while in the other form two dipolar moieties are cooperatively arranged to reinforce the electron-dipole interaction.

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