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Dive into the research topics where Regla Ayala is active.

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Featured researches published by Regla Ayala.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2003

ON THE HALIDE HYDRATION STUDY: DEVELOPMENT OF FIRST-PRINCIPLES HALIDE ION-WATER INTERACTION POTENTIAL BASED ON A POLARIZABLE MODEL

Regla Ayala; José M. Martínez; Rafael R. Pappalardo; Enrique Sánchez Marcos

The development of first-principles halide-water interaction potentials for fluoride and iodide anions is presented. The model adopted is the mobile charge densities in harmonic oscillator that allows for a flexible and polarizable character of the interacting particles. The set of points of the quantum mechanical potential energy surfaces are calculated up to the MP2 level. The nonadditive many-body contributions were included explicitly at the three-body terms. Structural and energetic properties of the [X(H2O)n]− clusters (n=1–6) are studied with the new interaction potentials developed. Halide aqueous solutions are also studied by means of Monte Carlo simulations. The agreement between experimental and our predicted estimations shows the good behavior of the proposed potentials. The developed potentials are able to properly describe both the microsolvation of clusters in gas phase and their hydration in aqueous solutions. The different nature of the interactions among F−, Br−, I− and water appears in ...


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2002

Development of first-principles interaction model potentials. An application to the study of the bromide hydration

Regla Ayala; José M. Martínez; Rafael R. Pappalardo; Humberto Saint-Martin; Iván Ortega-Blake; Enrique Sánchez Marcos

This work presents the development of first-principles bromide ion–water interaction potentials using the mobile charge density in harmonic oscillators-type model. This model allows for a flexible and polarizable character of the interacting molecules and has already been parametrized for water–water interactions. The prospected potential energy surfaces of the bromide ion-water system were computed quantum-mechanically at Hartree–Fock and Moller–Plesset second-order perturbation levels. In addition to the ion–solvent molecule pair, structures formed by the anion and two or three water molecules were considered in order to include many body effects. Minimizations of hydrated bromide clusters in gas phase [Br(H2O)n]− (n=1–6,10,15,20) and Monte Carlo computations of bromide aqueous solutions were performed to test the new potentials. Both structural and thermodynamic properties have been studied in detail and compared to the available experimental and theoretical values. From these comparisons, it was concl...


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2003

Interplay of computer simulations and x-ray absorption spectra in the study of the bromide hydration structure

Patrick J. Merkling; Regla Ayala; José M. Martínez; Rafael R. Pappalardo; Enrique Sánchez Marcos

X-ray absorption spectra (EXAFS and XANES) were generated from snapshots of a Monte Carlo (MC) simulation of a bromide ion aqueous solution and from model structures. The MC simulation relies on a recently developed and tested polarizable potential based on ab initio potential energy surfaces. A comparison with the experimental K-edge Br spectrum of a 0.3 M YBr3 aqueous solution was performed. XANES spectra are reproduced acceptably only if statistical fluctuations are included, which is performed in this work by using snapshots from computer simulation. As expected, single scattering BrO contributions are dominant in the case of the EXAFS region. Due to this fact, Br− in water is a good model system for studying the influence of the distribution of distances on the determination of structural parameters. Then, a parallel study of the data analysis procedure of the experimental EXAFS spectrum and those theoretically computed from the structures supplied by the MC simulation, was carried out. The shape of ...


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2007

Liquid methanol Monte Carlo simulations with a refined potential which includes polarizability, nonadditivity, and intramolecular relaxation

Maximiliano Valdéz-González; Humberto Saint-Martin; Jorge Hernández-Cobos; Regla Ayala; Enrique Sanchez-Marcos; Iván Ortega-Blake

Monte Carlo simulations of liquid methanol were performed using a refined ab initio derived potential which includes polarizability, nonadditivity, and intramolecular relaxation. The results present good agreement between the energetic and structural properties predicted by the model and those predicted by ab initio calculations of methanol clusters and experimental values of gas and condensed phases. The molecular level picture of methanol shows the existence of both rings and linear polymers in the methanol liquid phase.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2006

Ligand Field Effects on the Aqueous Ru(III)/Ru(II) Redox Couple from an All-Atom Density Functional Theory Perspective

Regla Ayala; Michiel Sprik

The [RuCl6](4)(-)(aq) → [RuCl6](3)(-)(aq) + e(-) and [Ru(CN)6](4)(-)(aq) → [Ru(CN)6](3)(-)(aq) + e(-) half redox reactions are investigated using density functional based ab initio molecular dynamics methods. The aim is to understand at a microscopic level how the difference in π-bonding of these ligands is reflected in the redox chemistry. To this end, we have computed the redox and reorganization free energies using a method derived from the Marcus theory of electron transfer. The resulting estimate of the free energy change of the full redox reaction between the two coordination complexes is compared to experiment. Our findings indicate that ligand character has an important effect on the vertical ionization chemistry but less on the relaxation of the system after removal or addition of electrons. This enables us to correlate the redox free energies with the HOMO energy levels of the combined solute + solvent system and analyze the redox chemistry in terms of the corresponding energy level diagram.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2008

Po(IV) hydration: a quantum chemical study.

Regla Ayala; José M. Martínez; Rafael R. Pappalardo; ‡ and Adela Muñoz-Páez; Enrique Sánchez Marcos

This work presents a theoretical study on the hydration of Po(IV) in solution. Three points have been addressed: (i) the level of calculation needed to properly describe the system under study, (ii) the hydration number of Po(IV), and (iii) the nature of the polonium-water bonding. The condensed medium effects have been included by means of a continuum solvation model, thus different [Po(H(2)O)(n)](4+) hydrates were embedded in a cavity surrounded by a polarizable dielectric medium. Among the quantum-mechanical calculation levels here considered, the MPW1PW91 functional was shown to be the most suitable, allowing a proper description of the Po-H(2)O interactions at affordable cost. The hydration number of Po(IV) was found to be between 8 and 9. This value is ruled by a dynamic equilibrium involving the octa- and ennea-hydrates, although the 7-fold coordination cannot be completely excluded. The hydration free energy of Po(IV) is estimated to be around -1480 kcal/mol. The Po-H(2)O bonding is dominated by strong electrostatic contributions although a small covalent contribution is responsible for the peculiar arrangement adopted by the smaller hydrates (n < or = 5). A natural bond order (NBO) analysis of the hydrate wave functions shows that the covalent bond involves the empty 6p orbitals of the polonium ion and one lone pair on the oxygen atom of the water molecule. A parallel investigation to the hydrate study, where the polonium ion was replaced by a tetravalent point charge plus a repulsion potential, was carried out. These results allowed a detailed examination of the electrostatic and nonelectrostatic contributions to the polonium hydrate formation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

An Ab Initio Molecular Dynamics Study on the Hydrolysis of the Po(IV) Aquaion in Water

Regla Ayala; Riccardo Spezia; Rodolphe Vuilleumier; José M. Martínez; Rafael R. Pappalardo; Enrique Sánchez Marcos

Po(IV) in water has been studied by means of Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics (CPMD) simulations. A new Trouiller-Martins pseudopotential for Po(IV) has been developed. This pseudopotential was tested by comparing the structure and energetics of small [Po(H(2)O)(n)(OH)(m)](4-m) clusters optimized quantum-mechanically. CP-MD simulations of 1 Po + 60 H(2)O were carried out starting from three different degrees of hydrolysis of the aquaion (m = 0, 2, and 3), in order to check the stability of the hydrolyzed forms under the simulation conditions. The three simulations converge to a description of the solution where the same hydrolyzed species are present. Dynamics of the octahydrate aquaion in water indicates that dehydration couples to hydrolysis processes, and the total coordination number decreases with the hydrolysis degree. The time evolution of the initial [Po(H(2)O)(8)](4+) aquaion in aqueous solution indicates that hydrolysis precedes to dehydration in the process from aquaion to hydroxoaquaion. Structural and dynamical properties of the ligands in the first coordination shell are analyzed. The power spectra and its contribution from fragments of the first coordination shell are also examined.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009

General quantum-mechanical study on the hydrolysis equilibria for a tetravalent aquaion: the extreme case of the Po(IV) in water.

Regla Ayala; José M. Martínez; Rafael R. Pappalardo; Muñoz Páez A; Sánchez Marcos E

A systematic study of the different hydrolyzed species derived from the hydrated Po(IV) in water, [Po(H(2)O)(n)(OH)(m)]((4-m)) for 1 m 4, and 4 m + n 9, has been carried out by means of quantum mechanical computations. The effects of outer solvation shells have been included using a polarizable continuum dielectric model. For a fixed number of hydroxyl groups, the preferred hydration number for the Po(IV) can be determined in terms of Gibbs energy. It is shown that the hydration number (n) systematically decreases with the increase in the number of hydroxyl groups (m) in such a way the total coordination number (n + m) becomes smaller, being 9 in the aquocomplex and 4 in the neutral hydroxo-complex. Free energies for the hydrolysis processes involving Po(IV) complexes and a different number of hydroxyl groups have been computed, revealing the strong tendency toward hydrolysis exhibited by these complexes. The predominant species of Po(IV) in aqueous solutions are ruled by a dynamical equilibrium involving aggregates containing in the first coordination shell OH(-) groups and water molecules. Although there is not experimental information to check the theoretical predictions, theoretical computations in solution seem to suggest that the most likely clusters are [Po(H(2)O)(5)(OH)(2)](2+) and [Po(H(2)O)(4)(OH)(2)](2+). The geometry of the different clusters is ruled by the trend of hydroxyl groups to be mutually orthogonal and to promote a strong perturbation of the water molecule in trans-position by lengthening the Po-H(2)O distances and tilting the corresponding bond angle. A general thermodynamic cycle is defined to compute the Gibbs free energy associated to the formation of the different hydrolyzed forms in solution. From it, the estimates of pK(a) values associated to the different protolytic equilibria are provided and discussed. Comparison of the relative values of pK(a) along a hydrolysis series with the experimental values for other tetravalent cations supports its consistency.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2014

Understanding the Role of the Cosolvent in the Zeolite Template Function of Imidazolium-Based Ionic Liquid

Regla Ayala; Svetlana Ivanova; José María Martínez Blanes; F. Romero-Sarria; J.A. Odriozola

In this work, a study for understanding the role played by [ClBmim], [BF4Bmim], [PF6Bmim], and [CH3SO3Bmim] ionic liquids (ILs) in the synthesis of zeolites is presented. The use of [ClBmim] and [CH3SO3Bmim] ILs, as reported earlier [ Chem. Eur. J. 2013 , 19 , 2122 ] led to the formation of MFI or BEA type zeolites. Contrary, [BF4Bmim] and [PF6Bmim] ILs did not succeed in organizing the Si-Al network into a zeolite structure. To try to explain these results, a series of quantum mechanical calculations considering monomers ([XBmim]) and dimers ([XBmim]2) by themselves and plus cosolvent (water or ethanol) were carried out, where X ≡ Cl(-), BF4(-), PF6(-), or CH3SO3(-). Our attention was focused on the similarities and differences among the two types of cosolvents and the relation between the structure and the multiple factors defining the interactions among the ILs and the cosolvent. Although a specific pattern based on local structures explaining the different behavior of these ILs as a zeolite structuring template was not found, the calculated interaction energies involving the Cl(-) and CH3SO3(-) anions were very close and larger than those for BF4(-) and PF6(-) species. These differences in energy can be used as an argument to describe their different behavior as structure directing agents. Moreover, the topology of the cosolvent is also an ingredient to take into account for a proper understanding of the results.


Molecular Simulation | 2006

The solvation of bromide anion in acetonitrile: a structural study based on the combination of theoretical calculations and X-ray absorption spectroscopy

Regla Ayala; José M. Martínez; Rafael R. Pappalardo; Adela Muñoz-Páez; E. Sánchez Marcos

This work studies the solvation of bromide in acetonitrile by combining quantum mechanics, computer simulations and X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy. Three different sets of interaction potentials were tested, one of them derived from literature and the other two are simple modifications of the previous one to include specificities of the bromide–acetonitrile interactions. Results for microsolvation of bromide were obtained by quantum mechanical optimization and classical minimization of small clusters [Br(ACN) n ]− (n = 9, 20). Analysis of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations has provided structural, dynamic and energetic aspects of the solvation phenomenon. The theoretical computation of Br K-edge XANES spectrum in solution using the structural information obtained from the different simulations has allowed the comparison among the three different potentials, as well as the examination of the main structural and dynamic factors determining the shape of the experimental spectrum.

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Humberto Saint-Martin

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Iván Ortega-Blake

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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