4.6 Article

Validating experiments for the reaction H2 + NH2- by dynamical calculations on an accurate full-dimensional potential energy surface

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 24, Issue 17, Pages 10160-10167

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2cp00870j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21973009, 21973109]
  2. Chongqing Municipal Natural Science Foundation [cstc2019jcyj-msxmX0087]
  3. Venture and Innovation Support Program for Chongqing Overseas Returnees [cx2021071]

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This study develops a globally accurate potential energy surface and investigates the inhibitory effect of exciting the rotational mode of H-2 on the H-2 + NH2- -> NH3 + H- reaction. The findings are consistent with experimental results and provide insights into the mechanism of ion-molecule reactions.
Ion-molecule reactions play key roles in the field of ion related chemistry. As a prototypical multi-channel ion-molecule reaction, the reaction H-2 + NH2- -> NH3 + H- has been studied for decades. In this work, we develop a new globally accurate potential energy surface (PES) for the title system based on hundreds of thousands of sampled points over a wide dynamically relevant region that covers long-range interacting configuration space. The permutational invariant polynomial-neural network (PIP-NN) method is used for fitting and the resulting total root mean squared error (RMSE) is extremely small, 0.026 kcal mol(-1). Extensive dynamical and kinetic calculations are carried out on this PIP-NN PES. Impressively, a unique phenomenon of significant reactivity suppression by exciting the rotational mode of H-2 is reported, supported by both the quasi-classical trajectory (QCT) and quantum dynamics (QD) calculations. Further analysis uncovers that exciting the H-2 rotational mode would prevent the formation of the reactant complex and thus suppress the reactivity. The calculated rate coefficients for H-2/D-2 + NH2- agree well with the experimental results, which show an inverse temperature dependence from 50 to 300 K, consistent with the capture nature of this barrierless reaction. The significant kinetic isotope effect observed by experiments is well reproduced by the QCT computations as well.

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