A transferable electrostatic map for solvation effects on amide I vibrations and its application to linear and two-dimensional spectroscopy
Abstract
A method for modeling infrared solvent shifts using the electrostatic field generated by the solvent is presented. The method is applied to the amide I vibration of N-methyl acetamide. Using ab initio calculations the fundamental frequency, anharmonicity, and the transition dipoles between the three lowest vibrational states are parametrized in terms of the electrostatic field. The generated map, which takes into account the electric field and its gradients at four molecular positions, is tested in a number of common solvents. Agreement of solvent shift and linewidths with experimental Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) data is found to within seven and four wave numbers, respectively, for polar solvents. This shows that in these solvents electrostatic contributions dominate solvation effects and the map is transferable between these types of solvents. The effect of motional narrowing arising from the fast solvent fluctuations is found to be substantial for the FTIR spectra. Also the two-dimensional infrared (2DIR) spectra, simulated using the constructed map, reproduce experimental results very well. The effect of anharmonicity fluctuations on the 2DIR spectra was found to be negligible.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Chemical Physics
- Pub Date:
- January 2006
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2006JChPh.124d4502L
- Keywords:
-
- 33.20.Tp;
- 33.15.Mt;
- 33.20.Ea;
- 31.70.Dk;
- 33.70.Jg;
- 31.15.Ar;
- Vibrational analysis;
- Rotation vibration and vibration-rotation constants;
- Infrared spectra;
- Environmental and solvent effects;
- Line and band widths shapes and shifts;
- Ab initio calculations