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Dive into the research topics where T. C. Cheng is active.

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Featured researches published by T. C. Cheng.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

IR Spectroscopy of Protonation in Benzene−Water Nanoclusters: Hydronium, Zundel, and Eigen at a Hydrophobic Interface

T. C. Cheng; B. Bandyopadhyay; Jonathan D. Mosley; Michael A. Duncan

The structure of ions in water at a hydrophobic interface influences important processes throughout chemistry and biology. However, experiments to measure these structures are limited by the distribution of configurations present and the inability to selectively probe the interfacial region. Here, protonated nanoclusters containing benzene and water are produced in the gas phase, size-selected, and investigated with infrared laser spectroscopy. Proton stretch, free OH, and hydrogen-bonding vibrations uniquely define protonation sites and hydrogen-bonding networks. The structures consist of protonated water clusters binding to the hydrophobic interface of neutral benzene via one or more π-hydrogen bonds. Comparison to the spectra of isolated hydronium, zundel, or eigen ions reveals the inductive effects and local ordering induced by the interface. The structures and interactions revealed here represent key features expected for aqueous hydrophobic interfaces.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2012

Mid- and Far-IR spectra of H5+ and D5+ compared to the predictions of anharmonic theory

T. C. Cheng; Ling Jiang; Knut R. Asmis; Yimin Wang; Joel M. Bowman; Allen M. Ricks; Michael A. Duncan

H5(+) is the smallest proton-bound dimer. As such, its potential energy surface and spectroscopy are highly complex, with extreme anharmonicity and vibrational state mixing; this system provides an important benchmark for modern theoretical methods. Unfortunately, previous measurements covered only the higher-frequency region of the infrared spectrum. Here, spectra for H5(+) and D5(+) are extended to the mid- and far-IR, where the fundamental of the proton stretch and its combinations with other low-frequency vibrations are expected. Ions in a supersonic molecular beam are mass-selected and studied with multiple-photon dissociation spectroscopy using the FELIX free electron laser. A transition at 379 cm(-1) is assigned tentatively to the fundamental of the proton stretch of H5(+), and bands throughout the 300-2200 cm(-1) region are assigned to combinations of this mode with bending and torsional vibrations. Coupled vibrational calculations, using ab initio potential and dipole moment surfaces, account for the highly anharmonic nature of these complexes.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Vibrational spectroscopy and theory of the protonated benzene dimer and trimer.

B. Bandyopadhyay; T. C. Cheng; Steven E. Wheeler; Michael A. Duncan

Protonated benzene cluster ions, H(C(6)H(6))(2)(+) and H(C(6)H(6))(3)(+), are produced in a pulsed electrical discharge source coupled to a supersonic expansion. Mass-selected complexes are investigated with infrared photodissociation spectroscopy in the 1000-3200 cm(-1) region using the method of argon tagging. The IR spectra of H(C(6)H(6))(2)(+)-Ar and H(C(6)H(6))(3)(+)-Ar contain broad bands in the high frequency region resulting from CH-π hydrogen bonds. Sharp peaks are observed in the fingerprint region arising from the ring modes of both the C(6)H(7)(+) and C(6)H(6) moieties. M06-2X calculations have been performed to investigate the structures and vibrational spectra of energetically low-lying configurations of these complexes. H(C(6)H(6))(2)(+) is predicted to have three nearly isoenergetic conformers: the parallel displaced (PD), T-shaped (TS), and canted (C) structures [Jaeger, H. M.; Schaefer, H. F.; Hohenstein, E. G.; Sherrill, C. D. Comput. Theor. Chem. 2011, 973, 47-52]. A comparison of the experimental dimer spectrum with those predicted for the three isomers suggests an average structure between the TS and PD conformers, which is consistent with the low energy barrier predicted to separate these two structures. No evidence is found for the C dimer even though it lies only 1.2 kcal/mol above the PD dimer. Although the trimer is also computed to have many low lying isomers, the IR spectrum limits the possible species present.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

IR photodissociation spectroscopy of H7(+), H9(+), and their deuterated analogues.

J. W. Young; T. C. Cheng; B. Bandyopadhyay; Michael A. Duncan

Cluster ions of H7(+)/D7(+) and H9(+)/D9(+) produced in a supersonic molecular beam with a pulsed discharge source are mass selected and studied with infrared laser photodissociation spectroscopy. Photodissociation occurs by the loss of H2 (D2) from each cluster, producing resonances in the 2000-4500 cm(-1) region. Vibrational patterns indicate that these ions consist of an H3(+) (D3(+)) core ion solvated by H2 (D2) molecules. There is no evidence for the shared proton structure seen previously for H5(+). The H3(+) ion core vibrational bands are weakened and broadened significantly, presumably by enhanced rates of intramolecular vibrational relaxation. Computational studies at the DFT/B3LYP or MP2 levels of theory (including scaling) are adequate to reproduce qualitative details of the vibrational spectra, but neither provides quantitative agreement with vibrational frequencies.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2010

Shared-Proton Mode Lights up the Infrared Spectrum of Fluxional Cations H5+ and D5+

T. C. Cheng; Biswajit Bandyopadyay; Yimin Wang; Stuart Carter; Bastiaan J. Braams; Joel M. Bowman; Michael A. Duncan


International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2010

Proton sharing in hydronium–nitrogen clusters probed with infrared spectroscopy

B. Bandyopadhyay; T. C. Cheng; Michael A. Duncan


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Infrared Spectroscopy of the Mass 31 Cation: Protonated Formaldehyde vs Methoxy

Jonathan D. Mosley; T. C. Cheng; Anne B. McCoy; Michael A. Duncan


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011

Electronic spectroscopy of CoNe+ via mass-selected photodissociation

Jonathan D. Mosley; T. C. Cheng; S. D. Hasbrouck; Allen M. Ricks; Michael A. Duncan


Chemical Physics Letters | 2016

Infrared spectroscopy of the glyoxal radical cation: The charge dependence of internal rotation

Daniel Leicht; T. C. Cheng; Michael A. Duncan


International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2013

Tunable infrared laser desorption and ionization of fullerene films

T. C. Cheng; Scott T. Akin; Collin J. Dibble; S. G. Ard; Michael A. Duncan

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Anne B. McCoy

University of Washington

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