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Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

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Page 1: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide

Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Page 2: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Background

Copper

Catalytic

Relatively cheap

Abundant

CuOH-Possible water splitting catalyst

Page 3: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Experiment

ElectrosprayNeedle

Cryogenic ion trap (10K)For cooling and H2-tagging

Ion steeringoptics

Flight TubeReflectron

Tunable infrared laser

600-4500 cm-1

CapillarySkimmer

Radio-frequencyion guides

Ion reaction cell LN2 cooled

(77-350K)

Spectroscopylaser

Pulsed valves

Page 4: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Ion Trapping and Tagging

H2 has ideal binding energy (~400 cm-

1 typically) and vapor pressure at trap

temperature (10 K)

H2 tagging may produce multiply tagged species

M.Z. Kamrath, R.A. Relph, T.L. Guasco, C.M. Leavitt, M.A. Johnson, Int. J. Mass. Spec. 2011, 300, 91-98

Page 5: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Predissociation Spectroscopy

E. Garand et. al. Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2012,14, 10109–10113

Page 6: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Experiment

ElectrosprayNeedle

Cryogenic ion trap (10K)For cooling and H2-tagging

Ion steeringoptics

Flight TubeReflectron

Tunable infrared laser

600-4500 cm-1

CapillarySkimmer

Radio-frequencyion guides

Ion reaction cell LN2 cooled

(77-350K)

Spectroscopylaser

Pulsed valves

Page 7: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

ResultsBy varying voltages in ion source multiple species of interest can be selected for study

Page 8: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Results-CuOH(H2O)+

Addition of 2nd deuterium tag distorts spectrum

Strong H2O-D2 interaction?

Multiple conformations for 1 tag complex?

Page 9: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Results-CuOH(H2O)+

CAM-B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory

Page 10: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Results-CuOH(H2O)2+

Severe peak suppression occurs after attachment of 2nd deuterium molecule

Possible solvent assisted isomerization?

Page 11: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Results-CuOH(H2O)2+

Isomers separated by~1450 cm-1

Multiple lines hidden under same peak?

Probe for H-bond stretches (2800-3100 cm-1)

CAM-B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory

Page 12: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Solvent Assisted Isomerization

Excess solvation energy (in this case from D2) can push the molecule into a more stable well

Excess D2 then evaporates to leave isomer 2+2D2

Page 13: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Results-CuOH(H2O)2+

Strong free H2O interaction withD2 tag

Theory matches well with experimentalspectrum

CAM-B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory

Page 14: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Results-CuOH(H2O)2+

CAM-B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p) level of theory

Page 15: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Results-CuOH(H2O)3+

Addition of 2nd deuterium tag seems to have no effect on spectrum

Page 16: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Conclusions

Hydrogen tags can not be assumed to offer little perturbation in metal species

Attachment of tags may distort the isomeric composition of ions of interest

Page 17: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Future Work

ElectrosprayNeedle

Cryogenic ion trap (10K)For cooling and H2-tagging

Ion steeringoptics

Flight TubeReflectron

Tunable infrared laser

600-4500 cm-1

CapillarySkimmer

Radio-frequencyion guides

Ion reaction cell LN2 cooled

(77-350K)

Spectroscopylaser

Pulsed valves

Tunable infrared laser

600-4500 cm-1

Page 18: Water Solvation of Copper Hydroxide Brett Marsh-UW Madison

Acknowledgements

Crim Group

Garand Group

University of Wisconsin Chemistry Department