H(2)O adsorption on hexagonal hydroxyapatite (001) and (010) stoichiometric surfaces has been studied at B3LYP level with a localized Gaussian basis set of polarized double-zeta quality using the periodic CRYSTAL06 code. Because four Ca(2+) cations are available at both surfaces, the considered H(2)O coverages span the 1/4 <= theta <= 5/4 range. The affinity of both HA surfaces for H(2)O is large: on the (001) surface, H(2)O adsorbs molecularly (binding energies BE approximate to 80 U mol(-1) per adsorbed molecule), whereas it dissociates on the (010) surface, giving rise to new surface terminations (CaO(w)H(w) and POH(w)). The highly negative reaction energy for H(2)O dissociation (between -250 and -320 kJ mol(-1) per adsorbed H(2)O molecule) strongly suggests that the pristine (010) surface "as cut" from the hydroxyapatite bulk cannot survive in aqueous environment. Conversely, on the reacted surface, H(2)O adsorbs molecularly with BE similar to those computed for the (001) surface. The B3LYP BEs have been contrasted to the experimental water adsorption enthalpies measured by microcalorimetry on polycrystalline hydroxyapatite samples, showing a fairly good agreement and supporting the suggestion that H(2)O vapor adsorbs on the already reacted (010) crystalline faces. Harmonic B3LYP vibrational features of adsorbed H(2)O show, when compared to modes of the gas-phase H(2)O, a hypsochromic shift of the HOH bending mode (<Delta delta(HOH)> = 49 cm(-1)) and a bathochromic shift of the OH stretching modes larger than 1700 cm(-1) (<Delta nu(OH)> = 427 cm(-1)), which are both in good agreement with literature experimental data

Corno, M., Busco, C., Bolis, V., Tosoni, S., Ugliengo, P. (2009). Water adsorption on the stoichiometric (001) and (010) surfaces of hydroxyapatite: A periodic B3LYP study. LANGMUIR, 25(4), 2188-2198 [10.1021/la803253k].

Water adsorption on the stoichiometric (001) and (010) surfaces of hydroxyapatite: A periodic B3LYP study

Tosoni, S;
2009

Abstract

H(2)O adsorption on hexagonal hydroxyapatite (001) and (010) stoichiometric surfaces has been studied at B3LYP level with a localized Gaussian basis set of polarized double-zeta quality using the periodic CRYSTAL06 code. Because four Ca(2+) cations are available at both surfaces, the considered H(2)O coverages span the 1/4 <= theta <= 5/4 range. The affinity of both HA surfaces for H(2)O is large: on the (001) surface, H(2)O adsorbs molecularly (binding energies BE approximate to 80 U mol(-1) per adsorbed molecule), whereas it dissociates on the (010) surface, giving rise to new surface terminations (CaO(w)H(w) and POH(w)). The highly negative reaction energy for H(2)O dissociation (between -250 and -320 kJ mol(-1) per adsorbed H(2)O molecule) strongly suggests that the pristine (010) surface "as cut" from the hydroxyapatite bulk cannot survive in aqueous environment. Conversely, on the reacted surface, H(2)O adsorbs molecularly with BE similar to those computed for the (001) surface. The B3LYP BEs have been contrasted to the experimental water adsorption enthalpies measured by microcalorimetry on polycrystalline hydroxyapatite samples, showing a fairly good agreement and supporting the suggestion that H(2)O vapor adsorbs on the already reacted (010) crystalline faces. Harmonic B3LYP vibrational features of adsorbed H(2)O show, when compared to modes of the gas-phase H(2)O, a hypsochromic shift of the HOH bending mode ( = 49 cm(-1)) and a bathochromic shift of the OH stretching modes larger than 1700 cm(-1) ( = 427 cm(-1)), which are both in good agreement with literature experimental data
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
EFFECTIVE CORE POTENTIALS; AB-INITIO; VIBRATIONAL PROPERTIES; MOLECULAR; CALCULATIONS; CATIONIC SITES; HARTREE-FOCK; CITRIC-ACID; FLUORAPATITE; DENSITY; SIMULATION
English
2009
25
4
2188
2198
none
Corno, M., Busco, C., Bolis, V., Tosoni, S., Ugliengo, P. (2009). Water adsorption on the stoichiometric (001) and (010) surfaces of hydroxyapatite: A periodic B3LYP study. LANGMUIR, 25(4), 2188-2198 [10.1021/la803253k].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/197676
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