October 8, 2024
Journal Article

Photoelectron Spectroscopy and Computational Study on Microsolvated [B10H10]2– Clusters and Comparisons to their [B12H12]2– Analogues

Abstract

Microhydrated closo-Boranes have attracted great interests due to their superchaotropic activity related to well-known Hofmeister effect and important applications in biomedical and battery fields. In this work, we report a combined negative ion photoelectron spectroscopy and quantum chemical investigation on hydrated closo-decaborate clusters [B10H10]2-·nH2O (n = 1 – 7) with a direct comparison to their analogues [B12H12]2-·nH2O and free water clusters. A single H2O molecule is found sufficient to stabilize the intrinsically unstable [B10H10]2- dianion. The first two water molecules strongly interact with the solute forming B-H···H-O dihydrogen bonds while additional water molecules show substantially reduced binding energies. Unlike [B12H12]2-·nH2O possessing highly structured water network with the attached H2O molecules arranged in a unified pattern by maximizing B-H···H-O dihydrogen bonding, distinct structural arrangements of the water clusters within [B10H10]2–·nH2O are achieved with the water cluster networks from trimer to heptamer resembling free water clusters. Such a distinct difference arises from the variations in size, symmetry, and charge distributions between these two dianions. The present finding again confirms the structural diversity of hydrogen-bonding networks in microhydrated closo-boranes and enrich our understanding of aqueous borate chemistry.

Published: October 8, 2024

Citation

Cao W., Z. Hu, H. Sun, and X. Wang. 2024. Photoelectron Spectroscopy and Computational Study on Microsolvated [B10H10]2– Clusters and Comparisons to their [B12H12]2– Analogues. Journal of Physical Chemistry A 128, no. 33:6981-6988. PNNL-SA-200783. doi:10.1021/acs.jpca.4c04772

Research topics