Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Karen M. Callahan is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Karen M. Callahan.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Solvation of Magnesium Dication: Molecular Dynamics Simulation and Vibrational Spectroscopic Study of Magnesium Chloride in Aqueous Solutions

Karen M. Callahan; Nadia N. Casillas-Ituarte; Martina Roeselová; Heather C. Allen; Douglas J. Tobias

Magnesium dication plays many significant roles in biochemistry. While it is available to the environment from both ocean waters and mineral salts on land, its roles in environmental and atmospheric chemistry are still relatively unknown. Several pieces of experimental evidence suggest that contact ion pairing may not exist at ambient conditions in solutions of magnesium chloride up to saturation concentrations. This is not typical of most ions. There has been disagreement in the molecular dynamics literature concerning the existence of ion pairing in magnesium chloride solutions. Using a force field developed during this study, we show that contact ion pairing is not energetically favorable. Additionally, we present a concentration-dependent Raman spectroscopic study of the Mg-O(water) hexaaquo stretch that clearly supports the absence of ion pairing in MgCl(2) solutions, although a transition occurring in the spectrum between 0.06x and 0.09x suggests a change in solution structure. Finally, we compare experimental and calculated observables to validate our force field as well as two other commonly used magnesium force fields, and in the process show that ion pairing of magnesium clearly is not observed at higher concentrations in aqueous solutions of magnesium chloride, independent of the choice of magnesium force field, although some force fields give better agreement to experimental results than others.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Surface organization of aqueous MgCl2 and application to atmospheric marine aerosol chemistry

Nadia N. Casillas-Ituarte; Karen M. Callahan; Cheng Y. Tang; Xiangke Chen; Martina Roeselová; Douglas J. Tobias; Heather C. Allen

Inorganic salts in marine aerosols play an active role in atmospheric chemistry, particularly in coastal urban regions. The study of the interactions of these ions with water molecules at the aqueous surface helps to elucidate the role of inorganic cations and anions in atmospheric processes. We present surface vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopic and molecular dynamics (MD) studies of aqueous MgCl2 surfaces as models of marine aerosol. Spectroscopy results reveal that the disturbance of the hydrogen bonding environment of the air/aqueous interface is dependent on the MgCl2 concentration. At low concentrations (< 1 M) minor changes are observed. At concentrations above 1 M the hydrogen bonding environment is highly perturbed. The 2.1 M intermediate concentration solution shows the largest SFG response relative to the other solutions including concentrations as high as 4.7 M. The enhancement of SFG signal observed for the 2.1 M solution is attributed to a larger SFG-active interfacial region and more strongly oriented water molecules relative to other concentrations. MD simulations reveal concentration dependent compression of stratified layers of ions and water orientation differences at higher concentrations. SFG and MD studies of the dangling OH of the surface water reveal that the topmost water layer is affected structurally at high concentrations (> 3.1 M). Finally, the MgCl2 concentration effect on a fatty acid coated aqueous surface was investigated and SFG spectra reveal that deprotonation of the carboxylic acid of atmospherically relevant palmitic acid (PA) is accompanied by binding of the Mg2+ to the PA headgroup.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2011

Nitrate Ion Photolysis in Thin Water Films in the Presence of Bromide Ions

Nicole K. Richards; Lisa M. Wingen; Karen M. Callahan; Noriko Nishino; Michael T. Kleinman; Douglas J. Tobias; Barbara J. Finlayson-Pitts

Nitrate ions commonly coexist with halide ions in aged sea salt particles, as well as in the Arctic snowpack, where NO(3)(-) photochemistry is believed to be an important source of NO(y) (NO + NO(2) + HONO + ...). The effects of bromide ions on nitrate ion photochemistry were investigated at 298 ± 2 K in air using 311 nm photolysis lamps. Reactions were carried out using NaBr/NaNO(3) and KBr/KNO(3) deposited on the walls of a Teflon chamber. Gas phase halogen products and NO(2) were measured as a function of photolysis time using long path FTIR, NO(y) chemiluminescence and atmospheric pressure ionization mass spectrometry (API-MS). Irradiated NaBr/NaNO(3) mixtures show an enhancement in the rates of production of NO(2) and Br(2) as the bromide mole fraction (χ(NaBr)) increased. However, this was not the case for KBr/KNO(3) mixtures where the rates of production of NO(2) and Br(2) remained constant over all values of χ(KBr). Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations show that the presence of bromide in the NaBr solutions pulls sodium toward the solution surface, which in turn attracts nitrate to the interfacial region, allowing for more efficient escape of NO(2) than in the absence of halides. However, in the case of KBr/KNO(3), bromide ions do not appreciably affect the distribution of nitrate ions at the interface. Clustering of Br(-) with NO(3)(-) and H(2)O predicted by MD simulations for sodium salts may facilitate a direct intermolecular reaction, which could also contribute to higher rates of NO(2) production. Enhanced photochemistry in the presence of halide ions may be important for oxides of nitrogen production in field studies such as in polar snowpacks where the use of quantum yields from laboratory studies in the absence of halide ions would lead to a significant underestimate of the photolysis rates of nitrate ions.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Effect of Magnesium Cation on the Interfacial Properties of Aqueous Salt Solutions

Karen M. Callahan; Nadia N. Casillas-Ituarte; Man Xu; Martina Roeselová; Heather C. Allen; Douglas J. Tobias

Sodium chloride solutions have been used extensively as a model of seawater in both theoretical and experimental studies of the chemistry of sea salt aerosol. Many groups have found that chloride anions are present at the air-solution interface. This observation has been important for the development of a mechanism for the heterogeneous production of molecular chlorine from chloride in sea salt aerosol. However, while sodium chloride is a major constituent of seawater, it is by no means the only salt present. Seawater contains one Mg(2+) for every eight Na(+). Mg(2+) is naturally occurring in ocean waters from mineral deposits in the Earths crust and biological sources. Mg(2+) forms a hexahydrate structure, rather than contact ion pairs with chloride anion, and this impacts the ordering of water in solution. In this study, we use molecular dynamics simulations, ab initio calculations, and vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy to explore the effect of the Mg(2+) cation and its tightly bound solvation shell on the surface propensity of chloride, ion-ion interactions, and water structure of the air-solution interface of concentrated chloride salt solutions. In addition, we provide molecular level details that may be relevant to the heterogeneous reactions of chloride in deliquesced sea salt aerosols. In particular, we show that the presence of the divalent Mg(2+) cation does not modify the surface propensity of chloride compared to Na(+) and hence, its availability to interfacial reaction, although some differences in the behavior of chloride may occur due to specific ion interactions. In this work, we also discuss the SFG free OH band at the surface of salt solutions and conclude that it is often not straightforward to interpret.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2013

Production of gas phase NO2 and halogens from the photolysis of thin water films containing nitrate, chloride and bromide ions at room temperature

Nicole K. Richards-Henderson; Karen M. Callahan; Paul Nissenson; Noriko Nishino; Douglas J. Tobias; Barbara J. Finlayson-Pitts

Nitrate and halide ions coexist in particles generated in marine regions, around alkaline dry lakes, and in the Arctic snowpack. Although the photochemistry of nitrate ions in bulk aqueous solution is well known, there is recent evidence that it may be more efficient at liquid-gas interfaces, and that the presence of other ions in solution may enhance interfacial reactivity. This study examines the 311 nm photolysis of thin aqueous films of ternary halide-nitrate salt mixtures (NaCl-NaBr-NaNO3) deposited on the walls of a Teflon chamber at 298 K. The films were generated by nebulizing aqueous 0.25 M NaNO3 solutions which had NaCl and NaBr added to vary the mole fraction of halide ions. Molar ratios of chloride to bromide ions were chosen to be 0.25, 1.0, or 4.0. The subsequent generation of gas phase NO2 and reactive halogen gases (Br2, BrCl and Cl2) were monitored with time. The rate of gas phase NO2 formation was shown to be enhanced by the addition of the halide ions to thin films containing only aqueous NaNO3. At [Cl(-)]/[Br(-)] ≤ 1.0, the NO2 enhancement was similar to that observed for binary NaBr-NaNO3 mixtures, while with excess chloride NO2 enhancement was similar to that observed for binary NaCl-NaNO3 mixtures. Molecular dynamics simulations predict that the halide ions draw nitrate ions closer to the interface where a less complete solvent shell allows more efficient escape of NO2 to the gas phase, and that bromide ions are more effective in bringing nitrate ions closer to the surface. The combination of theory and experiments suggests that under atmospheric conditions where nitrate ion photochemistry plays a role, the impact of other species such as halide ions should be taken into account in predicting the impacts of nitrate ion photochemistry.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Watching the low-frequency motions in aqueous salt solutions: the terahertz vibrational signatures of hydrated ions.

Stefan Funkner; Gudrun Niehues; Diedrich A. Schmidt; Matthias Heyden; Gerhard Schwaab; Karen M. Callahan; Douglas J. Tobias; Martina Havenith


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Ambient Pressure X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy and Molecular Dynamics Simulation Studies of Liquid/Vapor Interfaces of Aqueous NaCl, RbCl, and RbBr Solutions

Ming Hsin Cheng; Karen M. Callahan; Alexandria M. Margarella; Douglas J. Tobias; John C. Hemminger; Hendrik Bluhm; Maria J. Krisch


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2005

Laser-induced fluorescence spectra of 4-methylcyclohexoxy radical and perdeuterated cyclohexoxy radical and direct kinetic studies of their reactions with O2.

Lei Zhang; Karen M. Callahan; Dean Derbyshire; Theodore S. Dibble


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2006

Non-aqueous solvation of n-octanol and ethanol : Spectroscopic and computational studies

Lori M. Levering; Carrigan J. Hayes; Karen M. Callahan; Christopher M. Hadad; Heather C. Allen


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Atmospheric Chemistry Special Feature: Surface organization of aqueous MgCl2 and application to atmospheric marine aerosol chemistry

Nadia N. Casillas-Ituarte; Karen M. Callahan; Chuan-Yi Tang; Xiangke Chen; Martina Roeselová; Douglas J. Tobias; Heather C. Allen

Collaboration


Dive into the Karen M. Callahan's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Martina Roeselová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Noriko Nishino

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Theodore S. Dibble

State University of New York System

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge