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Title: | Raman spectra of vibrational and librational modes in methane clathrate hydrates using density functional theory |
Authors: | RAMYA, K. R. KUMAR, G. V. PAVAN VENKATNATHAN, ARUN Dept. of Physics |
Keywords: | Raman spectra Vibrational Librational modes Methane clathrate Functional theory 2012 |
Issue Date: | May-2012 |
Publisher: | AIP Publishing |
Citation: | Journal of Chemical Physics, 136(17), 174305 |
Abstract: | The sI type methane clathrate hydrate lattice is formed during the process of nucleation where methane gas molecules are encapsulated in the form of dodecahedron (512CH4) and tetrakaidecahedron (51262CH4) water cages. The characterization of change in the vibrational modes which occur on the encapsulation of CH4 in these cages plays a key role in understanding the formation of these cages and subsequent growth to form the hydrate lattice. In this present work, we have chosen the density functional theory (DFT) using the dispersion corrected B97-D functional to characterize the Raman frequency vibrational modes of CH4 and surrounding water molecules in these cages. The symmetric and asymmetric C–H stretch in the 512CH4 cage is found to shift to higher frequency due to dispersion interaction of the encapsulated CH4 molecule with the water molecules of the cages. However, the symmetric and asymmetric O–H stretch of water molecules in 512CH4 and 51262CH4 cages are shifted towards lower frequency due to hydrogen bonding, and interactions with the encapsulated CH4 molecules. The CH4 bending modes in the 512CH4 and 51262CH4 cages are blueshifted, though the magnitude of the shifts is lower compared to modes in the high frequency region which suggests bending modes are less affected on encapsulation of CH4. The low frequency librational modes which are collective motion of the water molecules and CH4 in these cages show a broad range of frequencies which suggests that these modes largely contribute to the formation of the hydrate lattice |
URI: | http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3702 https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4707933 |
ISSN: | 0021-9606 1089-7690 |
Appears in Collections: | JOURNAL ARTICLES |
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