Abstract

The penetration of a proton into the prenucleation building unit of a microporous gallophosphate and its interaction with an encapsulated fluorine anion have been investigated by means of DFT calculations. The inorganic part of the fluorinated gallophosphate ULM-18 has been modeled by a neutral, double four-ring (D4R) unit of formula [(GaOH)4(HPO4)4-H2O] encapsulating the fluorine ion. Assuming the cage to be rigid and to retain throughout the calculations the geometry determined from X-ray diffraction (XRD), the position of F(-) has been optimized, either as an isolated guest species or in the presence of an incoming proton. In agreement with the XRD structure, the fluorine atom has been shown to occupy in both cases a nonsymmetric position in the cage, being attached to three gallium atoms out of four. The distribution of the molecular electrostatic potential inside and outside the (F(-))@[(GaOH)4(HPO4)4-H2O] system has provided indications concerning the pathways that could be used by an incoming proton to penetrate the D4R unit and to approach the fluorine anion. The migration of a proton from an external site of fixation to the interior of the D4R unit has been found possible through two faces out of six. In both cases, the process has been found exothermic by approximately 0.17 eV and the energy barrier was estimated to approximately 0.8 eV. Inside the gallophosphate cage, the proton first adopts a position typical of a strong F...H...O bond made possible through an important shift of the fluorine anion away from the tripod of bonded gallium atoms. Then, the F(-)...H(+) system can easily evolve back and forth on a flat potential curve between one of the F...H...O bonded conformations and a situation characterized by the cleavage of the H...O link and the formation of a moderately activated F-H molecule, with the fluorine still attached to three gallium atoms.

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