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The vibrational properties of benzene on an ordered water ice surface

Published 15 Jul 2021 in cond-mat.mtrl-sci, astro-ph.EP, and physics.chem-ph | (2107.08826v1)

Abstract: We present a hybrid CCSD(T)+PBE-D3 approach to calculating the vibrational signatures for gas phase benzene and benzene adsorbed on an ordered water-ice surface. We compare the results of our method against experimentally recorded spectra and calculations performed using PBE-D3-only approaches (harmonic and anharmonic). Calculations use a proton ordered XIh water-ice surface consisting of 288 water molecules, and results are compared against experimental spectra recorded for an ASW ice surface. We show the importance of including a water ice surface into spectroscopic calculations, owing to the resulting differences in vibrational modes, frequencies and intensities of transitions seen in the IR spectrum. The overall intensity pattern shifts from a dominating $\nu_{11}$ band in the gas-phase to several high-intensity carriers for an IR spectrum of adsorbed benzene. When used for adsorbed benzene, the hybrid approach presented here achieves an RMSD for IR active modes of 21~cm${-1}$, compared to 72~cm${-1}$ and 49~cm${-1}$ for the anharmonic and harmonic PBE-D3 approaches, respectively. Our hybrid model for gaseous benzene also achieves the best results when compared to experiment, with an RMSD for IR active modes of 24~cm${-1}$, compared to 55~cm${-1}$ and 31~cm${-1}$ for the anharmonic and harmonic PBE-D3 approaches, respectively. To facilitate assignment, we generate and provide a correspondence graph between the normal modes of the gaseous and adsorbed benzene molecules. Finally, we calculate the frequency shifts, $\Delta\nu$, of adsorbed benzene relative to its gas phase to highlight the effects of surface interactions on vibrational bands and evaluate the suitability of our chosen dispersion-corrected density functional theory.

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