High Field 33S Solid State NMR and First-Principles Calculations in Potassium Sulfates
Author(s) -
Igor Moudrakovski,
Stephen Lang,
Serguei Patchkovskii,
John A. Ripmeester
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry a
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.756
H-Index - 235
eISSN - 1520-5215
pISSN - 1089-5639
DOI - 10.1021/jp908206c
Subject(s) - chemistry , castep , pseudopotential , atomic orbital , gaussian , basis set , gyromagnetic ratio , density functional theory , wave function , hypervalent molecule , ab initio quantum chemistry methods , field (mathematics) , tensor (intrinsic definition) , molecular physics , atomic physics , computational chemistry , magnetic moment , molecule , quantum mechanics , physics , electron , mathematics , reagent , pure mathematics , organic chemistry
A set of potassium sulfates presenting a variety of sulfur environments (K(2)SO(4), KHSO(4), K(2)S(2)O(7), and K(2)S(2)O(8)) has been studied by (33)S solid state NMR at 21 T. Low natural abundance (0.75%) and small gyromagnetic ratio of (33)S presented a serious challenge even at such a high magnetic field. Nevertheless, using the QCPMG technique we were able to obtain good signals from the sites with C(Q) values approaching 16 MHz. Assignment of the sites and the relative orientations of the EFG tensors were assisted by quantum mechanical calculations using the Gaussian 98 and CASTEP packages. The Gaussian 98 calculations were performed using the density functional method and gauge independent atomic orbitals on molecular clusters of about 100-120 atoms. The CASTEP calculations utilized periodic boundary conditions and a gauge-including projector augmented-wave pseudopotential approach. Although only semiquantitative agreement is observed between the experimental and calculated parameters, the calculations are a very useful aid in the interpretation of experimental data.
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