posted on 2014-11-26, 00:00authored byMassimo Riello, Giovanni Doni, Sorin
V. Filip, Martin Gold, Alessandro De Vita
The
conformational behavior of o-phenylene 8-mers
and 10-mers solvated in a series of linear alkane solvents by means
of classical molecular dynamics and first-principles calculations
was studied. Irrespective of the solvent used, we find that at ambient
pressure the molecule sits in the well-defined close-helical arrangement
previously observed in light polar solvents. However, for pressures
greater than 50 atm, and for tetradecane or larger solvent molecules,
our simulations predict that o-phenylene undergoes
a conformational transition to an uncoiled, extended geometry with
a 35% longer head-to-tail distance and a much larger overlap between
its lateral aromatic ring groups. The free energy barrier for the
transition was studied as a function of pressure and temperature for
both solute molecules in butane and hexadecane. Gas-phase density
functional theory-based nudged elastic band calculations on 8-mer
and 10-mer o-phenylene were used to estimate how
the pressure-induced transition energy barrier changes with solute
length. Our results indicate that a sufficiently large solvent molecule
size is the key factor enabling a configuration transition upon pressure
changes and that longer solute molecules associate with higher conformation
transition energy barriers. This suggests the possibility of designing
systems in which a solute molecule can be selectively “activated”
by a controlled conformation transition achieved at a predefined set
of pressure and temperature conditions.