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Peculiar Molecular Shape and Size Dependence of the Dynamics of Fluids Confined in a Small-Pore Metal–Organic Framework
Author(s) -
Ioannis Skarmoutsos,
Mohamed Eddaoudi,
Guillaume Maurin
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.563
H-Index - 203
ISSN - 1948-7185
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpclett.8b00855
Subject(s) - molecular dynamics , chemical physics , diatomic molecule , rotational dynamics , nanoporous , polyatomic ion , molecule , physics , linear molecular geometry , materials science , chemistry , nanotechnology , computational chemistry , quantum mechanics
Force-field-based molecular dynamics simulations were deployed to systematically explore the dynamics of confined molecules of different shapes and sizes, that is, linear (CO 2 and N 2 ) and spherical (CH 4 ) fluids, in a model small pore system, that is, the metal-organic framework SIFSIX-2-Cu-i. These computations unveil an unprecedented molecular symmetry dependence of the translational and rotational dynamics of fluids confined in channel-like nanoporous materials. In particular, this peculiar behavior is reflected by the extremely slow decay of the Legendre reorientational correlation functions of even-parity order for the linear fluids, which is associated with jump-like orientation flips, while the spherical fluid shows a very fast decay taking place on a subpicosecond time scale. Such a fundamental understanding is relevant to diverse disciplines such as in chemistry, physics, biology, and materials science, where diatomic or polyatomic molecules of different shapes/sizes diffuse through nanopores.

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