TY - JOUR
T1 - Hydroxylation of silica nanoclusters (SiO2)M(H2O)N, M = 4, 8, 16, 24: stability and structural trends
AU - Jelfs, Kim E.
AU - Flikkema, Edwin
AU - Bromley, Stefan T.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Employing global optimisation and ab initio calculations, we follow the step-wise molecular hydroxylation of (SiO2)M(H2O)N, M = 4, 8, 16, 24, cluster species from their anhydrous state up to a N:M ratio (RN/M) of ≥0.5. Increasing N from zero for low RN/M values, significantly and progressively, energetically stabilises all cluster sizes. In all cases, this initial steep decrease in energy levels off at a well-defined threshold RN/M value to a linear regime where the decrease in energy per hydroxylation by a water molecule reaches a stable minimum value. Analysis of the structures of the globally optimised clusters for each size, M, and hydroxylation, N, reveals that the initially anhydrous cluster structures have increasingly tetrahedral SiO4 centres until the transition to the linear hydroxylation regime, whereupon the average deviation from tetrahedrality starts to increase. With increasing RN/M the smaller clusters (M = 4, 8) tend to open up and incorporate increasing numbers of Si–OH groups, seemingly approaching the limit of separate Si(OH)4 monomers. The larger clusters considered (M = 16, 24), however, are more resistant to structural disruption and with increasing RN/M energetically prefer not to form more Si–OH groups but, instead to form hydrogen bonds with subsequent water molecules on their surfaces. Such behaviour is also found to be more energetically favourable than the formation of fully-hydroxylated Si16O24(OH)16 and Si24O36(OH)24 cage isomers for RN/M = 0.5. We further found that the threshold RN/M value at which the transition to the linear hydroxylation regime is encountered follows an inverse power law with respect to increasing cluster size M which may indicate the existence of a more general fundamental basis underlying our results.
AB - Employing global optimisation and ab initio calculations, we follow the step-wise molecular hydroxylation of (SiO2)M(H2O)N, M = 4, 8, 16, 24, cluster species from their anhydrous state up to a N:M ratio (RN/M) of ≥0.5. Increasing N from zero for low RN/M values, significantly and progressively, energetically stabilises all cluster sizes. In all cases, this initial steep decrease in energy levels off at a well-defined threshold RN/M value to a linear regime where the decrease in energy per hydroxylation by a water molecule reaches a stable minimum value. Analysis of the structures of the globally optimised clusters for each size, M, and hydroxylation, N, reveals that the initially anhydrous cluster structures have increasingly tetrahedral SiO4 centres until the transition to the linear hydroxylation regime, whereupon the average deviation from tetrahedrality starts to increase. With increasing RN/M the smaller clusters (M = 4, 8) tend to open up and incorporate increasing numbers of Si–OH groups, seemingly approaching the limit of separate Si(OH)4 monomers. The larger clusters considered (M = 16, 24), however, are more resistant to structural disruption and with increasing RN/M energetically prefer not to form more Si–OH groups but, instead to form hydrogen bonds with subsequent water molecules on their surfaces. Such behaviour is also found to be more energetically favourable than the formation of fully-hydroxylated Si16O24(OH)16 and Si24O36(OH)24 cage isomers for RN/M = 0.5. We further found that the threshold RN/M value at which the transition to the linear hydroxylation regime is encountered follows an inverse power law with respect to increasing cluster size M which may indicate the existence of a more general fundamental basis underlying our results.
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/2160/12795
U2 - 10.1039/c3cp53347f
DO - 10.1039/c3cp53347f
M3 - Article
C2 - 24189539
SN - 1463-9076
VL - 15
SP - 20438
EP - 20443
JO - Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
JF - Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
IS - 47
ER -