Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Water charge-transfer interaction energies

In a recent paper. Mo and Gao [5] used a sophisticated computational method [block-localized wave function energy decomposition (BLW-ED)] to decompose the total interaction energy between two prototypical ionic systems, acetate and meth-ylammonium ions, and water into permanent electrostatic (including Pauli exclusion), electronic polarization and charge-transfer contributions. Furthermore, the use of quantum mechanics also enabled them to account for the charge flow between the species involved in the interaction. Their calculations (Table 12.2) demonstrated that the permanent electrostatic interaction energy dominates solute-solvent interactions, as expected in the presence of ion species (76.1 and 84.6% for acetate and methylammonium ions, respectively) and showed the active involvement of solvent molecules in the interaction, even with a small but evident flow of electrons (Eig. 12.3). Evidently, by changing the solvent, different results could be obtained. [Pg.320]


See other pages where Water charge-transfer interaction energies is mentioned: [Pg.512]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.3155]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.276]    [Pg.185]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.102]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.202]    [Pg.445]    [Pg.625]    [Pg.270]    [Pg.1267]    [Pg.1053]    [Pg.1054]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.685]    [Pg.694]    [Pg.695]    [Pg.520]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.162]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.597]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.265]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.578]    [Pg.587]    [Pg.321]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.217 ]




SEARCH



Charge transfer energy

Charge-transfer interaction energies

Charge-transfer interactions

Charging energy

Energy charge

Interaction energy

Transfer Interactions

Water energy

Water transfer

© 2024 chempedia.info