posted on 2023-06-05, 12:05authored byJohn Mark
P. Martirez, Emily A. Carter
Simulations of carbon dioxide (CO2) in water may aid
in understanding the impact of its accumulation in aquatic environments
and help advance technologies for carbon capture and utilization (via,
e.g., mineralization). Quantum mechanical (QM) simulations based on
static molecular models with polarizable continuum solvation poorly
reproduce the energetics of CO2 hydration to form carbonic
acid in water, independent of the level of QM theory employed. Only
with density-functional-theory-based molecular dynamics and rare-event
sampling, followed by energy corrections based on embedded correlated
wavefunction theory (in conjunction with density functional embedding
theory), can a close agreement between theory and experiment be achieved.
Such multilevel simulations can serve as benchmarks for simpler, less
costly models, giving insight into potential errors of the latter.
The strong influence of sampling/averaging over dynamical solvent
configurations on the energetics stems from the difference in polarity
of both the transition state and product (both polar) versus the reactant
(nonpolar). When a solute undergoes a change in polarity during reaction,
affecting its interaction with the solvent, careful assessment of
the energetic contribution of the solvent response to this change
is critical. We show that static models (without structural sampling)
that incorporate three explicit water molecules can yield far superior
results than models with more explicit water molecules because fewer
water molecules yield less configurational artifacts. Static models
intelligently incorporating both explicit (molecules directly participating
in the reaction) and implicit solvation, along with a proper QM theory,
e.g., CCSD(T) for closed-shell systems, can close the accuracy gap
between static and dynamic models.