The MB-pol many-body potential has recently emerged as an accurate molecular model for water simulations from the gas to the condensed phase. In this study, the accuracy of MB-pol is systematically assessed across the three phases of water through extensive comparisons with experimental data and high-level ab initio calculations. Individual many-body contributions to the interaction energies as well as vibrational spectra of water clusters calculated with MB-pol are in excellent agreement with reference data obtained at the coupled cluster level. Several structural, thermodynamic, and dynamical properties of the liquid phase at atmospheric pressure are investigated through classical molecular dynamics simulations as a function of temperature. The structural properties of the liquid phase are in nearly quantitative agreement with X-ray diffraction data available over the temperature range from 268 to 368 K. The analysis of other thermodynamic and dynamical quantities emphasizes the importance of explicitly including nuclear quantum effects in the simulations, especially at low temperature, for a physically correct description of the properties of liquid water. Furthermore, both densities and lattice energies of several ice phases are also correctly reproduced by MB-pol. Following a recent study of DFT models for water, a score is assigned to each computed property, which demonstrates the high and, in many respects, unprecedented accuracy of MB-pol in representing all three phases of water.
Many-body effects in ice are investigated through a systematic analysis of the lattice energies of several proton ordered and disordered phases, which are calculated with different flexible water models, ranging from pairwise additive (q-TIP4P/F) to polarizable (TTM3-F and AMOEBA) and explicit many-body (MB-pol) potential energy functions. Comparisons with available experimental and diffusion Monte Carlo data emphasize the importance of an accurate description of the individual terms of the many-body expansion of the interaction energy between water molecules for the correct prediction of the energy ordering of the ice phases. Further analysis of the MB-pol results, in terms of fundamental energy contributions, demonstrates that the differences in lattice energies between different ice phases are sensitively dependent on the subtle balance between short-range two-body and three-body interactions, many-body induction, and dispersion energy. By correctly reproducing many-body effects at both short range and long range, it is found that MB-pol accurately predicts the energetics of different ice phases, which provides further support for the accuracy of MB-pol in representing the properties of water from the gas to the condensed phase.
Postsynthetic strategies for modifying metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have proven to be an incredibly powerful approach for expanding the scope and functionality of these materials. Previously, we reported on the postsynthetic exchange (PSE) of metal ions and ligands in the University of Oslo (UiO) series of MOFs. Detailed characterization by several analytical methods, most notably inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry and transmission electron microscopy reveal that metal ion deposition on the surface of these MOFs occurs in the form of nanoscale metal oxides, rather than yielding exchanged metal sites within the MOFs, as was previously reported. By contrast, these combined analytical methods do confirm that ligand-based PSE can occur in these MOFs. These findings provide new insight into the postsynthetic manipulation of MOF materials, highlight the importance of rigorously characterizing these materials to correctly assign their composition and structure, and provide a new route to making hybrid solids with a MOF@metal oxide architecture.
The rational design of multifunctional materials with properties that can be selectively controlled at the molecular level is key to the development and application of nanoscale devices. In this study, molecular dynamics simulations using ligand-field molecular mechanics are performed to elucidate, for the first time, the molecular mechanisms responsible for the variation of the spin-crossover properties of the {Fe(pz)[Pt(CN)4]} metal-organic framework upon water adsorption. The simulations demonstrate a direct relationship between the water loading adsorbed in the pores and the variation of the spin-crossover transition temperature, with the high-spin state of the material becoming gradually more stabilized as the number of adsorbed water molecules increases. The decrease of the spin-crossover temperature of {Fe(pz)[Pt(CN)4]} upon water adsorption predicted by the simulations is in agreement with the available experimental data and is traced back to the elongation of the bonds between the Fe(II) atoms and the organic linkers induced by interactions of the adsorbed water molecules with the framework.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.