4.6 Article

Exploration of Free Energy Surface and Thermal Effects on Relative Population and Infrared Spectrum of the Be6B11- Fluxional Cluster

期刊

MATERIALS
卷 14, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma14010112

关键词

global minimum; infrared spectrum; boron cluster; fluxional; density functional theory; temperature; Boltzmann factors; Gibbs free energy; entropy; Grimme's approach (DFT-D3); IR spectra

资金

  1. Conacyt [860052]

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The study investigates the distribution of entropy-driven isomers on Be6B11- clusters and the impact of temperature on their spectroscopy and relative populations. By using genetic algorithms and density functional theory, researchers locate the global minimum and explore low-energy structures, while considering thermodynamic properties and Boltzmann factors for determining temperature-dependent relative populations. The methodology shows that entropy and temperature play essential roles in determining the global minimum and the composition of infrared spectra at finite temperature.
The starting point to understanding cluster properties is the putative global minimum and all the nearby local energy minima; however, locating them is computationally expensive and difficult. The relative populations and spectroscopic properties that are a function of temperature can be approximately computed by employing statistical thermodynamics. Here, we investigate entropy-driven isomers distribution on Be6B11- clusters and the effect of temperature on their infrared spectroscopy and relative populations. We identify the vibration modes possessed by the cluster that significantly contribute to the zero-point energy. A couple of steps are considered for computing the temperature-dependent relative population: First, using a genetic algorithm coupled to density functional theory, we performed an extensive and systematic exploration of the potential/free energy surface of Be6B11- clusters to locate the putative global minimum and elucidate the low-energy structures. Second, the relative populations' temperature effects are determined by considering the thermodynamic properties and Boltzmann factors. The temperature-dependent relative populations show that the entropies and temperature are essential for determining the global minimum. We compute the temperature-dependent total infrared spectra employing the Boltzmann factor weighted sums of each isomer's infrared spectrum and find that at finite temperature, the total infrared spectrum is composed of an admixture of infrared spectra that corresponds to the spectra of the lowest-energy structure and its isomers located at higher energies. The methodology and results describe the thermal effects in the relative population and the infrared spectra.

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