Patrick J. Kelleher
Yale University
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Featured researches published by Patrick J. Kelleher.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015
Patrick J. Kelleher; Christopher J. Johnson; Joseph A. Fournier; Mark A. Johnson; Anne B. McCoy
To explore the extent of the molecular cation perturbation induced by complexation with He atoms required for the application of cryogenic ion vibrational predissociation (CIVP) spectroscopy, we compare the spectra of a bare NH4(+)(H2O) ion (obtained using infrared multiple photon dissociation (IRMPD)) with the one-photon CIVP spectra of the NH4(+)(H2O)·He1-3 clusters. Not only are the vibrational band origins minimally perturbed, but the rotational fine structures on the NH and OH asymmetric stretching vibrations, which arise from the free internal rotation of the -OH2 and -NH3 groups, also remain intact in the adducts. To establish the location and the quantum mechanical delocalization of the He atoms, we carried out diffusion Monte Carlo (DMC) calculations of the vibrational zero point wave function, which indicate that the barriers between the three equivalent minima for the He attachment are so small that the He atom wave function is delocalized over the entire -NH3 rotor, effectively restoring C3 symmetry for the embedded -NH3 group.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015
Joseph W. DePalma; Patrick J. Kelleher; Christopher J. Johnson; Joseph A. Fournier; Mark A. Johnson
Elucidation of the molecular-level mechanics underlying the dissolution of salts is one of the long-standing, fundamental problems in electrolyte chemistry. Here we follow the incremental structural changes that occur when water molecules are sequentially added to the ternary [MgSO4Mg](2+) ionic assembly using cryogenic vibrational predissociation spectroscopy of the cold, mass-selected [MgSO4Mg(H2O)n=4-11](2+) cluster ions. Although the bare [MgSO4Mg](2+) ion could not be prepared experimentally, its calculated minimum energy structure corresponds to a configuration where the two Mg(2+) ions attach on opposite sides of the central SO4(2-) ion in a bifurcated fashion to yield a D2d symmetry arrangement. Analysis of the observed spectral patterns indicate that water molecules preferentially attach to the flanking Mg(2+) ions for the n ≤ 7 hydrates, which results in an incremental weakening of the interaction between the ions. Water molecules begin to interact with the sequestered SO4(2-) anion promptly at n = 8, where changes in the band pattern clearly demonstrate that the intrinsic bifurcated binding motif among the ions evolves into quasilinear Mg(2+)-O-S arrangements as water molecules H-bond to the now free SO groups. Although condensed-phase MgSO4 occurs with a stable hexahydrate in which water molecules lie between the ion pairs, addition of a sixth water molecule to one of the Mg(2+) ions in the n = 11 cluster occurs with the onset of the second hydration shell such that the cation remains coordinated to one of the SO4(2-) oxygen atoms.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018
Fabian S. Menges; Helen J. Zeng; Patrick J. Kelleher; Olga Gorlova; Mark A. Johnson; Thomas Niemann; Anne Strate; Ralf Ludwig
We address the competition between intermolecular forces underlying the recent observation that ionic liquids (ILs) with a hydroxyl-functionalized cation can form domains with attractive interactions between the nominally repulsive positively charged constituents. Here we show that this behavior is present even in the isolated ternary (HEMIm+)2NTf2- complex (HEMIm+ = 1-(2-hydroxyethyl)-3-methylimidazolium) cooled to about 35 K in a photodissociation mass spectrometer. Of the three isomers isolated by double resonance techniques, one is identified to exhibit direct contact between the cations. This linkage involves a cooperative H-bond wherein the OH group on one cation binds to the OH group on the other, which then attaches to the basic N atom of the anion. Formation of this motif comes at the expense of the usually dominant interaction of the acidic C(2)H group on the Im ring with molecular anions, as evidenced by isomer-dependent shifts in the C(2)H vibrational fundamentals.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017
Chinh H. Duong; Olga Gorlova; Nan Yang; Patrick J. Kelleher; Mark A. Johnson; Anne B. McCoy; Qi Yu; Joel M. Bowman
Vibrational spectroscopy of the protonated water trimer provides a stringent constraint on the details of the potential energy surface (PES) and vibrational dynamics governing excess proton motion far from equilibrium. Here we report the linear spectrum of the cold, bare H+(H2O)3 ion using a two-color, IR-IR photofragmentation technique and follow the evolution of the bands with increasing ion trap temperature. The key low-energy features are insensitive to both D2 tagging and internal energy. The D2-tagged D+(D2O)3 spectrum is reported for the first time, and the isotope dependence of the band pattern is surprisingly complex. These spectra are reproduced by large-scale vibrational configuration interaction calculations based on a new full-dimensional PES, which treat the anharmonic effects arising from large amplitude motion. The results indicate such extensive mode mixing in both isotopologues that one should be cautious about assigning even the strongest features to particular motions, especially for the absorptions that occur close to the intramolecular bending mode of the water molecule.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017
Patrick J. Kelleher; Fabian Menges; Joseph W. DePalma; Joanna K. Denton; Mark A. Johnson; Gary H. Weddle; Barak Hirshberg; Robert Benny Gerber
The heterogeneous reaction of N2O5 with sea spray aerosols yields the ClNO2 molecule, which is postulated to occur through water-mediated charge separation into NO3- and NO2+ ions followed by association with Cl-. Here we address an alternative mechanism where the attack by a halide ion can yield XNO2 by direct insertion in the presence of water. This was accomplished by reacting X-(D2O)n (X = Cl, Br, I) cluster ions with N2O5 to produce ions with stoichiometry [XN2O5]-. These species were cooled in a 20 K ion trap and structurally characterized by vibrational spectroscopy using the D2 messenger tagging technique. Analysis of the resulting band patterns with DFT calculations indicates that they all correspond to exit channel ion-molecule complexes based on the association of NO3- with XNO2, with the NO3- constituent increasingly perturbed in the order I > Br > Cl. These results establish that XNO2 can be generated even when more exoergic reaction pathways involving hydrolysis are available and demonstrate the role of the intermediate [XN2O5]- in the formation of XNO2.
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2017
Joseph W. DePalma; Patrick J. Kelleher; Laís C. Tavares; Mark A. Johnson
Topics in Catalysis | 2014
Changchang Liu; Trudy Bolin; Paul A. Northrup; Sung-Chul Lee; Charles S. McEnally; Patrick J. Kelleher; Lisa D. Pfefferle; Gary L. Haller
Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2018
Nan Yang; Chinh H. Duong; Patrick J. Kelleher; Mark A. Johnson
Chemical Physics Letters | 2017
Nan Yang; Chinh H. Duong; Patrick J. Kelleher; Mark A. Johnson; Anne B. McCoy
72nd International Symposium on Molecular Spectroscopy | 2017
Joanna K. Denton; Mark Johnson; Fabian Menges; Patrick J. Kelleher