posted on 2023-11-06, 18:05authored bySolana Di Pino, Edward Danquah Donkor, Veronica M. Sánchez, Alex Rodriguez, Giuseppe Cassone, Damian Scherlis, Ali Hassanali
The
structure of the excess proton in liquid water has been the
subject of lively debate on both experimental and theoretical fronts
for the last century. Fluctuations of the proton are typically interpreted
in terms of limiting states referred to as the Eigen and Zundel species.
Here, we put these ideas under the microscope, taking advantage of
recent advances in unsupervised learning that use local atomic descriptors
to characterize environments of acidic water combined with advanced
clustering techniques. Our agnostic approach leads to the observation
of only one charged cluster and two neutral ones. We demonstrate that
the charged cluster involving the excess proton is best seen as an
ionic topological defect in water’s hydrogen bond network,
forming a single local minimum on the global free-energy landscape.
This charged defect is a highly fluxional moiety, where the idealized
Eigen and Zundel species are neither limiting configurations nor distinct
thermodynamic states. Instead, the ionic defect enhances the presence
of neutral water defects through strong interactions with the network.
We dub the combination of the charged and neutral defect clusters
as ZundEig, demonstrating that the fluctuations between
these local environments provide a general framework for rationalizing
more descriptive notions of the proton in the existing literature.