November 21, 2014
Journal Article

Dynamics of Energy Transfer and Soft-Landing in Collisions of Protonated Dialanine with Perfluorinated Self-Assembled Monolayer Surfaces

Abstract

Chemical dynamics simulations are reported which provide atomistic details of collisions of protonated dialanine, ala2-H+, with a perfluorinateted octanethiolate self-assembled monolayer (F-SAM ) surface. The simulations are performed at collisions energy Ei of 5.0, 13.5, 22.5, 30.00, and 70 eV, and incident angles 0o 0 (normal) and grazing 45o. Excellent agreement with experiment (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2000, 122, 9703-9714) is found for both the average fraction and distribution of the collision energy transferred to the ala2-H+ internal degrees of freedom. The dominant pathway for this energy transfer is to ala2-H+ vibration, but for Ei = 5.0 eV ~20% of the energy transfer is to ala2-H+ rotation. Energy transfer to ala2-H+ rotation decreases with increase in Ei and becomes negligible at high Ei. Three types of collisions are observed in the simulations: i.e. those for which ala2-H+ (1) directly scatters off the F-SAM surface; (2) sticks/physisorbs on//in the surface, but desorbs within the 10 ps numerical integration of the simulations; and (3) remains trapped (i.e. soft-landed) on/in the surface when the simulations are terminated. Penetration of the F-SAM by ala2-H+ is important for the latter two types of events. The trapped trajectories are expected to have relatively long residence times on the surface, since a previous molecular dynamics simulation (J. Phys. Chem. B 2014, 118, 5577-5588) shows that thermally accommodated ala2-H+ ions have an binding energy with the F-SAM surface of at least ~15 kcal/mol.

Revised: December 29, 2014 | Published: November 21, 2014

Citation

Pratihar S., S.C. Kohale, D.G. Bhakta, J. Laskin, and W.L. Hase. 2014. Dynamics of Energy Transfer and Soft-Landing in Collisions of Protonated Dialanine with Perfluorinated Self-Assembled Monolayer Surfaces. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 16, no. 43:23769-23778. PNNL-SA-104300. doi:10.1039/C4CP03535F