| Scientists
with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley
National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) appear to have settled
a long-standing scientific question about water clusters
– aggregates of water molecules that feature unique
properties, somewhere between that of liquid water and
steam. Experiments led by Daniel Neumark, director of
Berkeley Lab’s Chemical Sciences Division, have identified
two distinct forms of negatively charged water clusters,
thereby providing new insight into the fundamentally
important interaction between electrons and water.
“We have confirmed the presence
of two isomers of water cluster anions:
internally solvated structures, in which a hydrated
electron is localized within the cluster; and surface
state structures, in which the hydrated electron is
bound to the surface of the cluster,” Neumark says.
“The internally solvated structures are the ones whose
properties should approach those of the bulk liquid
hydrated electron as the cluster size is increased.”
Neumark is the principal author
of a paper published in /Science Express, /the on-line
version of the journal /Science/, entitled /Observation
of Large Water Cluster Anions with Surface-bound Excess
Electrons/. The other authors were Jan Verlet, Arthur
Bragg, Aster Kammrath of the University of California
at Berkeley, where Neumark is a professor of chemistry,
plus Ori Cheshnovsky, of the Tel-Aviv University in
Israel.^ This and a companion paper published by Neumark’s
group earlier this year were listed as one of the
“runner-up” Breakthroughs of
2004 by /Science./
Hydrated
electrons form when an excess of electrons are injected
into liquid water. Despite being the focus of numerous
studies since their discovery in 1962, there remains
much to be learned about hydrated electrons. What
is known is that their presence enhances the reactivity
of water molecules with other molecules in a number
of important chemical, physical and biological processes.
The long-held belief has been
that an individual hydrated electron is confined within
a small void created by a surrounding cluster of water
molecules. Clusters, which may consist of as few as
three or as many as 20,000 individual atoms in size,
are too large to be thought of as a molecule but too
small to be classified as a bulk-phases liquid or
a solid. Because of their in-between size, they often
make excellent subjects for learning more about the
physical and chemical properties of bulk phase materials.
“In our lab, we carry out experiments
that help us understand how phenomena associated with
macroscopic materials manifest themselves in finite
clusters,” Neumark says.
One of the key questions his
group has been addressing concerns the relationship
of a hydrated electron to the size of the water cluster
surrounding it. How large can the cluster be for the
effects of the hydrated electron to mimic the effects
in bulk phase liquid, and do those effects change
as the cluster grows in size? Previous studies indicated
the presence of hydrated electrons in water clusters
but found conflicting results as to their effect.
“The problem was those earlier
studies couldn’t determine that the clusters could
have either an internally solvated or a surface hydrated
electron structure,” Neumark says. “Our experiment
pretty much settles this issue.”
Neumark and his colleagues
created clusters of water anions by passing argon
gas over molecules of water and heavy water at temperatures
of 20 degrees Celsius, introducing the gas mixture
into vacuum, and generating negatively charged clusters
through the interaction of the gas mixture with low
energy electrons. The clusters were then studied using
a combination of femtosecond laser light and time-resolved
photoelectron imaging. This application of time-resolved
techniques to gas phase processes occurring on a femtosecond
time scale has been one of the most important developments
in chemical dynamics during the last ten years and
has yielded valuable information on the photo dissociation
and reaction dynamics of molecules and clusters
In this latest effort, Neumark
and his colleagues were able to characterize an entirely
new class of cluster anions with vertical binding
energies (the energy required to remove an electron
from its
orbit) that were significantly lower than any previously
recorded.
“The data are consistent with
a hydrated electron structure in which the excess
electron is bound to the surface of the cluster,”
Neumark says.
“This result implies that previously observed water
cluster anions, with higher vertical binding energies,
were indeed from internally solvated electrons and
are therefore structurally similar to a bulk hydrated
electron.”
From their findings, Neumark
and his colleagues conclude that an anion water cluster
needs to consist of at least 11-25 molecules in order
to be able to have distinguishable internally solvated
or surface state structures. They also found that
they could create conditions that would favor the
formation of one structure over the other.
Says Neumark, “By operating
our ion source so that we produced colder clusters,
we were able to favor the formation of surface state
over the internally solvated structure,” says Neumark.
“That was somewhat surprising since the internal structures
tend to be more stable. For the surface structure,
we’re basically attaching electrons to ice nanocrystals.”
Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department
of Energy national laboratory located in Berkeley,
California. It conducts unclassified scientific research
and is managed by the University of California. Visit
our Website at www.lbl.gov/.
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