Abstract
Four new hydronium ion structures are investigated by means of quantum mechanical calculations at the DFT/B3LYP6-311+G(2d,2p) level of theory. There exist experimental crystallographic hydronium cations (H(11)O(5) (+)) of two different geometrical structures, one BEXFEQ (acyclic) and one IYEPEH (cyclic). Molecular calculations reveal their relative stability. Another hydronium cation NEBDII (H(15)O(7) (+)) when optimized reveals a totally new and unexpected structure. All three optimized structures are shown to be quite stable as judged by their binding energies, and therefore may possibly be found in solution. A main result of this article is the discovery of three new optimized structures of hydronium ions, all of which are preferentially ring structures. The optimized structure of H(15)O(7) (+) is a cube lacking a vertex. Putting a water molecule at the "empty" vertex leads by energy optimization to a structure of H(17)O(8) (+) which has the approximate symmetry of a cube. This cubic structure, as judged by its fragments, is one of the most interesting of the hydronium ions studied in this paper. The addition of H(3)O(+) to a group of seven neutral molecules in the hypothetical reaction H(3)O(+) + 7 H(2)O → H(17)O(8) (+) induces two water molecules to each capture a proton at the expense of two other water molecules (converting them into hydroxyl anions) leading to a cluster with the formula [H3O+0.7]3[H2O]3+0.1[OH-0.6]2 , where the superscripts are the integrated QTAIM atomic charges (in atomic units) on the respective species (inside the bracket) or on groups of a given species (outside the bracket). The cubic arrangement of 3H(3)O(+).3H(2)O.2OH(-) is accompanied with a significant redistribution of charge: Each hydronium cation carries ca. +0.7 au, the hydroxyl anions only around -0.6 au each, while the water molecules remain quasi-neutral with a slight positive charge.