Publication | Closed Access
Theoretical Study of the Dissociation of Nitric Acid at a Model Aqueous Surface
46
Citations
65
References
2007
Year
EngineeringAcid-base ChemistryAcid PrecipitationComputational ChemistryChemistrySolution (Chemistry)Environmental ChemistryTheoretical StudyAtmospheric ScienceMolecular KineticsBiophysicsOzone Layer DepletionNitric AcidPhysical ChemistryAcid DissociationHydrogenModel Aqueous SurfaceSurface ScienceProton TransferMolecular Nitric AcidAtmospheric ProcessChemical KineticsSurface Reactivity
The issue of acid dissociation of nitric acid at an aqueous surface is relevant in various portions of the atmosphere in connection with ozone depletion. This proton-transfer reaction is studied here via electronic structure calculations at the HF/SBK+(d) level of theory on the HNO(3) x (H(2)O)(3) model reaction system embedded in clusters comprising 33, 40, 45, and 50 classical, polarizable waters with an increasing degree of solvation of the nitrate group. Free energy estimates for all the cases examined favor undissociated, molecular nitric acid over the 0-300 K temperature range, including that relevant for the upper troposphere, where it is connected to the issue of the mechanism of nitric acid uptake by water ice aerosols. The presence of molecular HNO(3) at 300 K at the surface is further supported by vibrational band assignments in good agreement with a very recent surface-sensitive vibrational spectroscopy study of diluted HNO(3)/H(2)O solutions.
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