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Electronic Fingerprint of the Protonated Imidazole Dimer Probed by X‑ray Absorption Spectroscopy

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posted on 2024-01-26, 23:10 authored by Sambit K. Das, Marc-Oliver Winghart, Peng Han, Debkumar Rana, Zhuang-Yan Zhang, Sebastian Eckert, Mattis Fondell, Thomas Schnappinger, Erik T. J. Nibbering, Michael Odelius
Protons in low-barrier superstrong hydrogen bonds are typically delocalized between two electronegative atoms. Conventional methods to characterize such superstrong hydrogen bonds are vibrational spectroscopy and diffraction techniques. We introduce soft X-ray spectroscopy to uncover the electronic fingerprints for proton sharing in the protonated imidazole dimer, a prototypical building block enabling effective proton transport in biology and high-temperature fuel cells. Using nitrogen core excitations as a sensitive probe for the protonation status, we identify the X-ray signature of a shared proton in the solvated imidazole dimer in a combined experimental and theoretical approach. The degree of proton sharing is examined as a function of structural variations that modify the shape of the low-barrier potential in the superstrong hydrogen bond. We conclude by showing how the sensitivity to the quantum distribution of proton motion in the double-well potential is reflected in the spectral signature of the shared proton.

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