TY - JOUR
T1 - Isotope Effects on the Vaporization of Organic Compounds from an Aqueous Solution–Insight from Experiment and Computations
AU - Rostkowski, Michał
AU - Schürner, Heide K.V.
AU - Sowińska, Agata
AU - Vasquez, Luis
AU - Przydacz, Martyna
AU - Elsner, Martin
AU - Dybala-Defratyka, Agnieszka
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society
PY - 2021/12/30
Y1 - 2021/12/30
N2 - An isotope fractionation analysis of organic groundwater pollutants can assess the remediation at contaminated sites yet needs to consider physical processes as potentially confounding factors. This study explores the predictability of water–air partitioning isotope effects from experiments and computational predictions for benzene and trimethylamine (both H-bond acceptors) as well as chloroform (H-bond donor). A small, but significant, isotope fractionation of different direction and magnitude was measured with ϵ = −0.12‰ ± 0.07‰ (benzene), ϵC = 0.49‰ ± 0.23‰ (triethylamine), and ϵH = 1.79‰ ± 0.54‰ (chloroform) demonstrating that effects do not correlate with expected hydrogen-bond functionalities. Computations revealed that the overall isotope effect arises from contributions of different nature and extent: a weakening of intramolecular vibrations in the condensed phase plus additional vibrational modes from a complexation with surrounding water molecules. Subtle changes in benzene contrast with a stronger coupling between intra- and intermolecular modes in the chloroform–water system and a very local vibrational response with few atoms involved in a specific mode of triethylamine. An energy decomposition analysis revealed that each system was affected differently by electrostatics and dispersion, where dispersion was dominant for benzene and electrostatics dominated for chloroform and triethylamine. Interestingly, overall stabilization patterns in all studied systems originated from contributions of dispersion rather than other energy terms.
AB - An isotope fractionation analysis of organic groundwater pollutants can assess the remediation at contaminated sites yet needs to consider physical processes as potentially confounding factors. This study explores the predictability of water–air partitioning isotope effects from experiments and computational predictions for benzene and trimethylamine (both H-bond acceptors) as well as chloroform (H-bond donor). A small, but significant, isotope fractionation of different direction and magnitude was measured with ϵ = −0.12‰ ± 0.07‰ (benzene), ϵC = 0.49‰ ± 0.23‰ (triethylamine), and ϵH = 1.79‰ ± 0.54‰ (chloroform) demonstrating that effects do not correlate with expected hydrogen-bond functionalities. Computations revealed that the overall isotope effect arises from contributions of different nature and extent: a weakening of intramolecular vibrations in the condensed phase plus additional vibrational modes from a complexation with surrounding water molecules. Subtle changes in benzene contrast with a stronger coupling between intra- and intermolecular modes in the chloroform–water system and a very local vibrational response with few atoms involved in a specific mode of triethylamine. An energy decomposition analysis revealed that each system was affected differently by electrostatics and dispersion, where dispersion was dominant for benzene and electrostatics dominated for chloroform and triethylamine. Interestingly, overall stabilization patterns in all studied systems originated from contributions of dispersion rather than other energy terms.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85122036668&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c05574
DO - 10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c05574
M3 - Article
C2 - 34908428
AN - SCOPUS:85122036668
SN - 1520-6106
VL - 125
SP - 13868
EP - 13885
JO - Journal of Physical Chemistry B
JF - Journal of Physical Chemistry B
IS - 51
ER -