Publication | Closed Access
A molecular theory of solvation dynamics
173
Citations
69
References
1994
Year
EngineeringComputational ChemistryChemistryMolecular DynamicsSolution (Chemistry)Molecular ThermodynamicsMolecular SimulationMolecular KineticsPhysicsPhysical ChemistryMolecular TheoryMolecular MechanicQuantum ChemistryNatural SciencesSolvation ChemistrySolute Charge DistributionHigher OrderChemical ThermodynamicsCharge Distribution
The dynamic solvation time correlation function šµ(t) is, within linear response, formulated in terms of the intermolecular soluteāsolvent interactions, without recourse to the intrinsically macroscopic concept of a cavity carved out of a dielectric medium. For interaction site models (ISM) of both the solute and the solvent, the theory relates the fluctuating polarization charge density of the solvent to the fluctuating vertical energy gap that controls šµ(t). The theory replaces the factual (or bare) solute charge distribution by a surrogate expressed in terms of the soluteāsolvent siteāsite direct correlation functions. Calculations for solute ions in water and in acetonitrile lead to šµ(t) and the second moment of the associated spectral density in good agreement with molecular dynamics simulation results in the literature. We also use the theory to calculate šµ(t) for model solutes in which the āāsuddenāā change of the charge distribution involves multipoles of higher order. The response is qualitatively similar in the various cases studied here.
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