Authors: Ortiz de Zarate, Josu; Bartolomei, Massimiliano; Gonzalez-Lezana, Tomas; Campos-Martinez, Jose; Hernandez, Marta I.; Perez de Tudela, Ricardo; Hernandez-Rojas, Javier; Breton, Jose; Pirani, Fernando; Kranabetter, Lorenz; Martini, Paul; Kuhn, Martin; Laimer, Felix; Scheier, Paul

Contribution: Article

Journal: PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS

Publication date: 2019/07/28

DOI: 10.1039/c9cp02017a

Abstract: Interactions of atomic cations with molecular hydrogen are of interest for a wide range of applications in hydrogen technologies. These interactions are fairly strong despite being non-covalent, hence one can ask whether hydrogen molecules would form dense, solid-like, solvation shells around the ion (snowballs) or rather a more weakly bound compound. In this work, the interactions between Cs+ and H-2 are studied both experimentally and computationally. Isotopic substitution of H-2 by D-2 is also investigated. On the one hand, helium nanodroplets doped with cesium and hydrogen or deuterium are ionized by electron impact and the (H-2/D-2)(n)Cs+ (up to n = 30) clusters formed are identified via mass spectrometry. On the other hand, a new analytical potential energy surface, based on ab initio calculations, is developed and used to study cluster energies and structures by means of classical and quantum-mechanical Monte Carlo methods. The most salient features of the measured ion abundances are remarkably mimicked by the computed evaporation energies, particularly for the clusters composed of deuterium. This result supports the reliability of the present potential energy surface and allows us to recommend its use in related systems. Clusters with either twelve H-2 or D-2 molecules stand out for their stability and quasi-rigid icosahedral structures. However, the first solvation shell involves thirteen or fourteen molecules for hydrogenated or deuterated clusters, respectively. This shell retains its internal structure when extra molecules are added to the second shell and is nearly solid-like, especially for the deuterated clusters. The role played by three-body induction interactions as well as the rotational degrees of freedom is analyzed and they are found to be significant (up to 15% and 18%, respectively) for the molecules belonging to the first solvation shell.