| Literature DB >> 35598206 |
Yan-Fang Wang1, Xin-Yue Ji1, Le-Cai Xing1,2, Peng-Dong Wang1, Jian Liu1, Tian-Di Zhang1, Hao-Nan Zhao1, Hong-Tao He3,4.
Abstract
The isotopic fractionation factor and element partition coefficient can be calculated only after the geometric optimization of the molecular clusters is completed. Optimization directly affects the accuracy of some parameters, such as the average bond length, molecular volume, harmonic vibrational frequency, and other thermodynamic parameters. Here, we used the improved volume variable cluster model (VVCM) method to optimize the molecular clusters of a typical oxide, quartz. We documented the average bond length and relative volume change. Finally, we extracted the harmonic vibrational frequencies and calculated the equilibrium fractionation factor of the silicon and oxygen isotopes. Given its performance in geometrical optimization and isotope fractionation factor calculation, we further applied the improved VVCM method to calculate isotope equilibrium fractionation factors of Cd and Zn between the hydroxide (Zn-Al layered double hydroxide), carbonate (cadmium-containing calcite) and their aqueous solutions under superficial conditions. We summarized a detailed procedure and used it to re-evaluate published theoretical results for cadmium-containing hydroxyapatite, emphasizing the relative volume change for all clusters and confirming the optimal point charge arrangement (PCA). The results showed that the average bond length and isotope fractionation factor are consistent with those published in previous studies, and the relative volume changes are considerably lower than the results calculated using the periodic boundary method. Specifically, the average Si-O bond length of quartz was 1.63 Å, and the relative volume change of quartz centered on silicon atoms was - 0.39%. The average Zn-O bond length in the Zn-Al-layered double hydroxide was 2.10 Å, with a relative volume change of 1.96%. Cadmium-containing calcite had an average Cd-O bond length of 2.28 Å, with a relative volume change of 0.45%. At 298 K, the equilibrium fractionation factors between quartz, Zn-Al-layered double hydroxide, cadmium-containing calcite, and their corresponding aqueous solutions were [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text], [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] respectively. These results strongly support the reliability of the improved VVCM method for geometric optimization of molecular clusters.Entities:
Keywords: Geometric optimization; Isotopic equilibrium fractionation factor; Molecular cluster; Relative volume change; VVCM
Year: 2022 PMID: 35598206 PMCID: PMC9124387 DOI: 10.1186/s12932-022-00078-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geochem Trans ISSN: 1467-4866 Impact factor: 3.700
Fig. 1Flow chart of the improved VVCM method
Fig. 2Schematic diagram of PCA
Comparison of theoretical results for three optimal PCAs
| Optimal PCA (pm) | Si–O bond length (Å) | ΔV/V0 (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 × 94 | 1.630 | 2.03 | 0.78 |
| 3 × 111 | 1.629 | 1.00 | 1.76 |
| 5 × 116 | 1.625 | − 0.39 | 2.02 |
PCA on the anion or anion group in the outermost layer of a molecular cluster
| Cluster | Molecular formula | Total valence | 1 × | 2 × | 5 × | Net charge | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a1 × | b1 × | a2 × | b2 × | c2 × | a5 × | b5 × | ||||
| Si–Qtz | Si24O66 | − 36 | – | – | 180 × (4/4) × 1/5 | 0 | ||||
| O–Qtz | Si29O77 | − 38 | – | – | 190 × (4/4) × 1/5 | 0 | ||||
| Zn–Al LDH | Zn13Al3O60C4H30 | − 39 | 12 × 3/6 | – | 90 × (1 + 3/6 + 2/6) × 1/5 | 0 | ||||
| Cd–Cal | Ca6Cd(CO3)26 | − 38 | – | 60 × 2/6 × 1/2 | 210 × (2/6 + 2/6) × 1/5 | 0 | ||||
| Cd–HAp | Ca12Cd(PO4)30(OH)3 | − 67 | 2 × 2/7 | 10 × 2/9 | 24 × (2/9 + 2/9) × 1/2 | 16 × (2/7 + 2/7) × 1/2 | 40 × (2/7 + 2/9) × 1/2 | 150 × (2 × 2/9 + 2/7) × 1/5 | 140 × (2 × 2/7 + 2/9) × 1/5 | 0 |
The outermost layer of the Si–Qtz molecular cluster has 5 × point charges (180). The outermost layer of the O–Qtz molecular cluster has 5 × point charges (190). The outermost layer of the Zn–Al LDH molecular cluster has 1 × point charges (12) and 5 × point charges (90). The outermost layer of the Cd–Cal molecular cluster has 2 × point charges (60) and 5 × point charges (210). The outermost layer of the HAp molecular cluster has a1 × (2), b1 × (10), a2 × (24), b2 × (16), c2 × (40), a5 × (150), and b5 × (140) point charges
Si–Qtz net charge (0) = total cluster valent (-36) + total point charge (+ 36). O–Qtz net charge (0) = total cluster valent (-38) + total point charge (+ 38). Zn–Al LDH net charge (0) = total cluster valent (-39) + total point charge (+ 39). Cd–Cal net charge (0) = total cluster valent (-38) + total charge of point charge (+ 38). Cd–HAp net charge (0) = total cluster valent (-67) + total charge of point charge (+ 67)
Fig. 3Electronic energy of the Si–Qtz system varies with d5×
Fig. 4Electronic energy of the Zn–Al LDH system varies with d5× and d1×
Fig. 5Electronic energy of the Cd–Cal system varies with d5× and d2×
Fig. 6Electronic energy of the Cd–HAp system varies with d5×, d2× and d1×
Fig. 7ΔV/V0 variations in the Si–Qtz molecular cluster
Fig. 8ΔV/V0 variations in the Zn–Al LDH molecular cluster. The red points were the relative volume changes for molecular cluster without interlayer anions, while the black point was that for molecular cluster with interlayer anions
Fig. 9ΔV/V0 variations in the Cd–Cal molecular cluster
Relative volume change of solid molecular clusters
| Cluster | ΔV/V0 (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| This study | Previous studies | |
| Si–Qtz | − 0.39 | 7.17a, − 2.66b, 4.61c, − 2.75d |
| Zn–Al LDH | 1.96 | – |
| Cd–Cal | 0.45 | 3.54e, 3.47f |
| Cd–HAp | 0.74 | |
aPBE [68]
bLDA [68]
cGGA(PW91) [69]
dLDA [69]
eCaCO3 [70]
f[71]
gDFT calculations [25]
hGGA–PBE [72]
iGGA–PW91 [73]
Fig. 10ΔV/V0 variations in the Cd–HAp molecular cluster
Isotopic equilibrium fractionation between molecular clusters and their corresponding aqueous solutions
| Cluster | Calculated bond length (Å) | Experimental bond length (Å) | 1000lnβ (cluster, 298 K, ‰) | 1000lnβ (aquocomplex, 298 K, ‰) | Δ cluster-aquocomplex |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Si–Qtz | 1.63, 1.62a, 1.61b | 1.61c, 1.62d | 73.65 | 71.63 | 2.02 (Si isotopes) |
| O–Qtz | 1.63 | 1.61c | 110.31 | 74.26 | 36.05 (O isotopes) |
| Zn–Al LDH | 2.10 | 2.08e | 4.87 | 3.75 | 1.12 (Zn isotopes) |
| Cd–Cal | 2.28 | 2.30f | 2.62 | − 0.26 (Cd isotopes) |
aSi–O bond length (α–quartz, Ab initio LDF theory, Purton et al. [64])
bSi–O bond length (quartz, DFT calculations, He and Liu [22])
cSi–O bond length (quartz, X-ray diffraction, Hazen et al. [39])
dSi–O bond length (quartz, X-ray diffraction at 848 K, Kihara [48])
eZn–O bond length (X-ray diffraction and EXAFS, Gou et al. [3])
fCd–O bond length (EXAFS, Bailey et al. [65])
gDFT calculations (He et al. [25])
Fig. 11Theoretical Si isotope equilibrium fractionation factors between quartz and aqueous H4SiO4 solution [5, 7, 22, 75–82]
Fig. 12Theoretical O isotope equilibrium fractionation factors between quartz and liquid water [6, 68, 83–91]