J. Phys. Chem. C 118, 4483-4488 (2014).
(Publication Date (Web): February 4, 2014)
The noncovalent interaction of the formic acid dimer (FAD) with pyrene and single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) is studied using both density functional theory with an empirical dispersion correction as well spin-component-scaled and F12 variants of second-order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory. For the FAD-pyrene model system, it is shown that the dispersion-corrected DFT methods provide similar accurate results for the noncovalent interaction of carboxylic acid dimers with large conjugated π-systems such as MP2 and SCS-MP2. The binding energy of FAD in SWCNTs is found to be sensitive to the radius of the nanotube. It amounts to ca. 22 kcal/mol in the armchair (6,6) SWCNT and decreases with increasing tube radius. In the armchair (8,8) SWCNT, the binding energy is already 25% smaller. To facilitate an experimental identification of FAD inside SWCNTs, we report results for the shifts of the vibrational frequency, where we could identify intense C-O, C=O and O-H stretch modes as promising infrared signatures for an experimental detection of such complexes.
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