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1 gezelter 4007 \documentclass[journal = jpccck, manuscript = article]{achemso}
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41    
42     \title{Nitrile vibrations as reporters of field-induced phase
43 gezelter 4033 transitions in 4-cyano-4'-pentylbiphenyl (5CB)}
44 gezelter 4007 \author{James M. Marr}
45     \author{J. Daniel Gezelter}
46     \email{gezelter@nd.edu}
47     \affiliation[University of Notre Dame]{251 Nieuwland Science Hall\\
48     Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry\\
49     University of Notre Dame\\
50     Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
51    
52     \date{\today}
53    
54     \begin{document}
55    
56     \maketitle
57    
58     \begin{doublespace}
59    
60     \begin{abstract}
61 gezelter 4028 4-cyano-4'-pentylbiphenyl (5CB) is a liquid-crystal-forming compound
62 gezelter 4026 with a terminal nitrile group aligned with the long axis of the
63     molecule. Simulations of condensed-phase 5CB were carried out both
64 gezelter 4027 with and without applied electric fields to provide an understanding
65 gezelter 4054 of the Stark shift of the terminal nitrile group. A field-induced
66     isotropic-nematic phase transition was observed in the simulations,
67     and the effects of this transition on the distribution of nitrile
68     frequencies were computed. Classical bond displacement correlation
69     functions exhibit a $\sim 40 \mathrm{~cm}^{-1}$ red shift of a
70     portion of the main nitrile peak, and this shift was observed only
71     when the fields were large enough to induce orientational ordering
72     of the bulk phase. Joint spatial-angular distribution functions
73     indicate that phase-induced anti-caging of the nitrile bond is
74     contributing to the change in the nitrile spectrum.
75 gezelter 4007 \end{abstract}
76    
77     \newpage
78    
79     \section{Introduction}
80    
81 gezelter 4028 Nitrile groups can serve as very precise electric field reporters via
82     their distinctive Raman and IR signatures.\cite{Boxer:2009xw} The
83     triple bond between the nitrogen and the carbon atom is very sensitive
84     to local field changes and has been observed to have a direct impact
85     on the peak position within the spectrum. The Stark shift in the
86 gezelter 4039 spectrum can be quantified and mapped onto a field that is impinging
87 gezelter 4048 upon the nitrile bond. The response of nitrile groups to electric
88     fields has now been investigated for a number of small
89     molecules,\cite{Andrews:2000qv} as well as in biochemical settings,
90     where nitrile groups can act as minimally invasive probes of structure
91     and
92     dynamics.\cite{Tucker:2004qq,Webb:2008kn,Lindquist:2009fk,Fafarman:2010dq}
93     The vibrational Stark effect has also been used to study the effects
94     of electric fields on nitrile-containing self-assembled monolayers at
95     metallic interfaces.\cite{Oklejas:2002uq,Schkolnik:2012ty}
96 gezelter 4028
97    
98     Recently 4-cyano-4'-pentylbiphenyl (5CB), a liquid crystalline
99     molecule with a terminal nitrile group, has seen renewed interest as
100     one way to impart order on the surfactant interfaces of
101     nanodroplets,\cite{Moreno-Razo:2012rz} or to drive surface-ordering
102     that can be used to promote particular kinds of
103     self-assembly.\cite{PhysRevLett.111.227801} The nitrile group in 5CB
104     is a particularly interesting case for studying electric field
105     effects, as 5CB exhibits an isotropic to nematic phase transition that
106     can be triggered by the application of an external field near room
107     temperature.\cite{Gray:1973ca,Hatta:1991ee} This presents the
108     possiblity that the field-induced changes in the local environment
109     could have dramatic effects on the vibrations of this particular CN
110     bond. Although the infrared spectroscopy of 5CB has been
111     well-investigated, particularly as a measure of the kinetics of the
112     phase transition,\cite{Leyte:1997zl} the 5CB nitrile group has not yet
113     seen the detailed theoretical treatment that biologically-relevant
114     small molecules have
115 gezelter 4042 received.\cite{Lindquist:2008bh,Lindquist:2008qf,Oh:2008fk,Choi:2008cr,Morales:2009fp,Waegele:2010ve}
116 gezelter 4028
117 gezelter 4007 The fundamental characteristic of liquid crystal mesophases is that
118     they maintain some degree of orientational order while translational
119     order is limited or absent. This orientational order produces a
120     complex direction-dependent response to external perturbations like
121 gezelter 4028 electric fields and mechanical distortions. The anisotropy of the
122 gezelter 4007 macroscopic phases originates in the anisotropy of the constituent
123     molecules, which typically have highly non-spherical structures with a
124 gezelter 4028 significant degree of internal rigidity. In nematic phases, rod-like
125 gezelter 4007 molecules are orientationally ordered with isotropic distributions of
126 gezelter 4028 molecular centers of mass. For example, 5CB has a solid to nematic
127     phase transition at 18C and a nematic to isotropic transition at
128     35C.\cite{Gray:1973ca}
129 gezelter 4007
130 gezelter 4028 In smectic phases, the molecules arrange themselves into layers with
131     their long (symmetry) axis normal ($S_{A}$) or tilted ($S_{C}$) with
132     respect to the layer planes. The behavior of the $S_{A}$ phase can be
133     partially explained with models mainly based on geometric factors and
134     van der Waals interactions. The Gay-Berne potential, in particular,
135     has been widely used in the liquid crystal community to describe this
136     anisotropic phase
137 gezelter 4042 behavior.~\cite{Gay:1981yu,Berne:1972pb,Kushick:1976xy,Luckhurst:1990fy,Cleaver:1996rt}
138 gezelter 4028 However, these simple models are insufficient to describe liquid
139     crystal phases which exhibit more complex polymorphic nature.
140     Molecules which form $S_{A}$ phases can exhibit a wide variety of
141     subphases like monolayers ($S_{A1}$), uniform bilayers ($S_{A2}$),
142     partial bilayers ($S_{\tilde A}$) as well as interdigitated bilayers
143     ($S_{A_{d}}$), and often have a terminal cyano or nitro group. In
144     particular, lyotropic liquid crystals (those exhibiting liquid crystal
145 gezelter 4040 phase transitions as a function of water concentration), often have
146 gezelter 4028 polar head groups or zwitterionic charge separated groups that result
147 gezelter 4040 in strong dipolar interactions,\cite{Collings:1997rz} and terminal
148     cyano groups (like the one in 5CB) can induce permanent longitudinal
149     dipoles.\cite{Levelut:1981eu} Modeling of the phase behavior of these
150     molecules either requires additional dipolar
151     interactions,\cite{Bose:2012eu} or a unified-atom approach utilizing
152     point charges on the sites that contribute to the dipole
153     moment.\cite{Zhang:2011hh}
154 gezelter 4007
155 gezelter 4028 Macroscopic electric fields applied using electrodes on opposing sides
156     of a sample of 5CB have demonstrated the phase change of the molecule
157     as a function of electric field.\cite{Lim:2006xq} These previous
158     studies have shown the nitrile group serves as an excellent indicator
159     of the molecular orientation within the applied field. Lee {\it et
160     al.}~showed a 180 degree change in field direction could be probed
161     with the nitrile peak intensity as it changed along with molecular
162     alignment in the field.\cite{Lee:2006qd,Leyte:1997zl}
163 gezelter 4007
164 gezelter 4028 While these macroscopic fields work well at indicating the bulk
165 gezelter 4048 response, the response at a molecular scale has not been studied. With
166     the advent of nano-electrodes and the ability to couple these
167     electrodes to atomic force microscopy, control of electric fields
168     applied across nanometer distances is now possible.\cite{citation1} In
169     special cases where the macroscopic fields are insufficient to cause
170     an observable Stark effect without dielectric breakdown of the
171     material, small potentials across nanometer-sized gaps may be of
172 gezelter 4028 sufficient strength. For a gap of 5 nm between a lower electrode
173     having a nanoelectrode placed near it via an atomic force microscope,
174     a potential of 1 V applied across the electrodes is equivalent to a
175     field of 2x10\textsuperscript{8} $\frac{V}{M}$. This field is
176     certainly strong enough to cause the isotropic-nematic phase change
177 gezelter 4048 and as well as a visible Stark tuning of the nitrile bond. We expect
178     that this would be readily visible experimentally through Raman or IR
179     spectroscopy.
180 gezelter 4007
181 gezelter 4028 In the sections that follow, we outline a series of coarse-grained
182     classical molecular dynamics simulations of 5CB that were done in the
183     presence of static electric fields. These simulations were then
184     coupled with both {\it ab intio} calculations of CN-deformations and
185     classical bond-length correlation functions to predict spectral
186     shifts. These predictions made should be easily varifiable with
187     scanning electrochemical microscopy experiments.
188 gezelter 4007
189     \section{Computational Details}
190 gezelter 4040 The force field used for 5CB was a united-atom model that was
191     parameterized by Guo {\it et al.}\cite{Zhang:2011hh} However, for most
192     of the simulations, each of the phenyl rings was treated as a rigid
193     body to allow for larger time steps and very long simulation times.
194     The geometries of the rigid bodies were taken from equilibrium bond
195 gezelter 4048 distances and angles. Although the individual phenyl rings were held
196     rigid, bonds, bends, torsions and inversion centers that involved
197     atoms in these substructures (but with connectivity to the rest of the
198 gezelter 4040 molecule) were still included in the potential and force calculations.
199 gezelter 4007
200 gezelter 4028 Periodic simulations cells containing 270 molecules in random
201     orientations were constructed and were locked at experimental
202     densities. Electrostatic interactions were computed using damped
203     shifted force (DSF) electrostatics.\cite{Fennell:2006zl} The molecules
204     were equilibrated for 1~ns at a temperature of 300K. Simulations with
205     applied fields were carried out in the microcanonical (NVE) ensemble
206     with an energy corresponding to the average energy from the canonical
207 gezelter 4040 (NVT) equilibration runs. Typical applied-field equilibration runs
208     were more than 60ns in length.
209 gezelter 4007
210 gezelter 4027 Static electric fields with magnitudes similar to what would be
211     available in an experimental setup were applied to the different
212     simulations. With an assumed electrode seperation of 5 nm and an
213     electrostatic potential that is limited by the voltage required to
214     split water (1.23V), the maximum realistic field that could be applied
215 gezelter 4028 is $\sim 0.024$ V/\AA. Three field environments were investigated:
216     (1) no field applied, (2) partial field = 0.01 V/\AA\ , and (3) full
217 gezelter 4048 field = 0.024 V/\AA\ .
218 gezelter 4007
219 gezelter 4027 After the systems had come to equilibrium under the applied fields,
220 gezelter 4028 additional simulations were carried out with a flexible (Morse)
221     nitrile bond,
222     \begin{displaymath}
223     V(r_\ce{CN}) = D_e \left(1 - e^{-\beta (r_\ce{CN}-r_e)}\right)^2
224 gezelter 4036 \label{eq:morse}
225 gezelter 4028 \end{displaymath}
226 gezelter 4036 where $r_e= 1.157437$ \AA , $D_e = 212.95 \mathrm{~kcal~} /
227 gezelter 4029 \mathrm{mol}^{-1}$ and $\beta = 2.67566 $\AA~$^{-1}$. These
228 gezelter 4036 parameters correspond to a vibrational frequency of $2358
229 gezelter 4039 \mathrm{~cm}^{-1}$, somewhat higher than the experimental
230     frequency. The flexible nitrile moiety required simulation time steps
231     of 1~fs, so the additional flexibility was introducuced only after the
232     rigid systems had come to equilibrium under the applied fields.
233     Whenever time correlation functions were computed from the flexible
234     simulations, statistically-independent configurations were sampled
235     from the last ns of the induced-field runs. These configurations were
236     then equilibrated with the flexible nitrile moiety for 100 ps, and
237     time correlation functions were computed using data sampled from an
238 gezelter 4028 additional 200 ps of run time carried out in the microcanonical
239     ensemble.
240 gezelter 4027
241     \section{Field-induced Nematic Ordering}
242    
243     In order to characterize the orientational ordering of the system, the
244     primary quantity of interest is the nematic (orientational) order
245     parameter. This was determined using the tensor
246     \begin{equation}
247 gezelter 4040 Q_{\alpha \beta} = \frac{1}{2N} \sum_{i=1}^{N} \left(3 \hat{u}_{i
248     \alpha} \hat{u}_{i \beta} - \delta_{\alpha \beta} \right)
249 gezelter 4027 \end{equation}
250 gezelter 4040 where $\alpha, \beta = x, y, z$, and $\hat{u}_i$ is the molecular
251 gezelter 4027 end-to-end unit vector for molecule $i$. The nematic order parameter
252     $S$ is the largest eigenvalue of $Q_{\alpha \beta}$, and the
253     corresponding eigenvector defines the director axis for the phase.
254     $S$ takes on values close to 1 in highly ordered (smectic A) phases,
255 gezelter 4048 but falls to much smaller values ($0 \rightarrow 0.3$) for isotropic
256     fluids. Note that the nitrogen and the terminal chain atom were used
257     to define the vectors for each molecule, so the typical order
258     parameters are lower than if one defined a vector using only the rigid
259     core of the molecule. In nematic phases, typical values for $S$ are
260     close to 0.5.
261 gezelter 4027
262 gezelter 4029 The field-induced phase transition can be clearly seen over the course
263     of a 60 ns equilibration runs in figure \ref{fig:orderParameter}. All
264 gezelter 4027 three of the systems started in a random (isotropic) packing, with
265     order parameters near 0.2. Over the course 10 ns, the full field
266     causes an alignment of the molecules (due primarily to the interaction
267     of the nitrile group dipole with the electric field). Once this
268 gezelter 4039 system began exhibiting nematic ordering, the orientational order
269     parameter became stable for the remaining 150 ns of simulation time.
270 gezelter 4029 It is possible that the partial-field simulation is meta-stable and
271     given enough time, it would eventually find a nematic-ordered phase,
272     but the partial-field simulation was stable as an isotropic phase for
273 gezelter 4032 the full duration of a 60 ns simulation. Ellipsoidal renderings of the
274     final configurations of the runs shows that the full-field (0.024
275     V/\AA\ ) experienced a isotropic-nematic phase transition and has
276     ordered with a director axis that is parallel to the direction of the
277     applied field.
278    
279     \begin{figure}[H]
280     \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{Figure1}
281     \caption{Evolution of the orientational order parameters for the
282 gezelter 4029 no-field, partial field, and full field simulations over the
283     course of 60 ns. Each simulation was started from a
284 gezelter 4032 statistically-independent isotropic configuration. On the right
285     are ellipsoids representing the final configurations at three
286     different field strengths: zero field (bottom), partial field
287     (middle), and full field (top)}
288 gezelter 4027 \label{fig:orderParameter}
289     \end{figure}
290    
291    
292 gezelter 4029 \section{Sampling the CN bond frequency}
293 gezelter 4027
294 gezelter 4035 The vibrational frequency of the nitrile bond in 5CB depends on
295     features of the local solvent environment of the individual molecules
296     as well as the bond's orientation relative to the applied field. The
297     primary quantity of interest for interpreting the condensed phase
298     spectrum of this vibration is the distribution of frequencies
299     exhibited by the 5CB nitrile bond under the different electric fields.
300 gezelter 4042 There have been a number of elegant techniques for obtaining
301     vibrational lineshapes from classical simulations, including a
302     perturbation theory approach,\cite{Morales:2009fp} the use of an
303     optimized QM/MM approach coupled with the fluctuating frequency
304     approximation,\cite{Lindquist:2008qf} and empirical frequency
305 gezelter 4048 correlation maps.\cite{Oh:2008fk} Three distinct (and comparatively
306 gezelter 4042 primitive) methods for mapping classical simulations onto vibrational
307 gezelter 4048 spectra were brought to bear on the simulations in this work:
308 gezelter 4029 \begin{enumerate}
309     \item Isolated 5CB molecules and their immediate surroundings were
310 gezelter 4048 extracted from the simulations. These nitrile bonds were stretched
311 gezelter 4029 and single-point {\em ab initio} calculations were used to obtain
312     Morse-oscillator fits for the local vibrational motion along that
313     bond.
314 gezelter 4048 \item A static-field extension of the empirical frequency correlation
315     maps developed by Cho {\it et al.}~\cite{Oh:2008fk} for nitrile
316     moieties in water was attempted.
317 gezelter 4029 \item Classical bond-length autocorrelation functions were Fourier
318     transformed to directly obtain the vibrational spectrum from
319     molecular dynamics simulations.
320     \end{enumerate}
321    
322     \subsection{CN frequencies from isolated clusters}
323 gezelter 4033 The size of the periodic condensed phase system prevented direct
324     computation of the complete library of nitrile bond frequencies using
325     {\it ab initio} methods. In order to sample the nitrile frequencies
326     present in the condensed-phase, individual molecules were selected
327     randomly to serve as the center of a local (gas phase) cluster. To
328     include steric, electrostatic, and other effects from molecules
329     located near the targeted nitrile group, portions of other molecules
330     nearest to the nitrile group were included in the quantum mechanical
331     calculations. The surrounding solvent molecules were divided into
332     ``body'' (the two phenyl rings and the nitrile bond) and ``tail'' (the
333 gezelter 4039 alkyl chain). Any molecule which had a body atom within 6~\AA\ of the
334 gezelter 4033 midpoint of the target nitrile bond had its own molecular body (the
335 gezelter 4039 4-cyano-biphenyl moiety) included in the configuration. Likewise, the
336     entire alkyl tail was included if any tail atom was within 4~\AA\ of
337     the target nitrile bond. If tail atoms (but no body atoms) were
338 gezelter 4035 included within these distances, only the tail was included as a
339     capped propane molecule.
340 gezelter 4029
341 gezelter 4033 \begin{figure}[H]
342     \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{Figure2}
343     \caption{Cluster calculations were performed on randomly sampled 5CB
344 gezelter 4035 molecules (shown in red) from each of the simulations. Surrounding
345     molecular bodies were included if any body atoms were within 6
346     \AA\ of the target nitrile bond, and tails were included if they
347     were within 4 \AA. Included portions of these molecules are shown
348     in green. The CN bond on the target molecule was stretched and
349     compressed, and the resulting single point energies were fit to
350 gezelter 4039 Morse oscillators to obtain a distribution of frequencies.}
351 gezelter 4033 \label{fig:cluster}
352     \end{figure}
353 gezelter 4032
354 gezelter 4035 Inferred hydrogen atom locations were added to the cluster geometries,
355     and the nitrile bond was stretched from 0.87 to 1.52~\AA\ at
356     increments of 0.05~\AA. This generated 13 configurations per gas phase
357     cluster. Single-point energies were computed using the B3LYP
358     functional~\cite{Becke:1993kq,Lee:1988qf} and the 6-311++G(d,p) basis
359     set. For the cluster configurations that had been generated from
360     molecular dynamics running under applied fields, the density
361     functional calculations had a field of $5 \times 10^{-4}$ atomic units
362     ($E_h / (e a_0)$) applied in the $+z$ direction in order to match the
363     molecular dynamics simulations.
364 gezelter 4007
365 gezelter 4035 The energies for the stretched / compressed nitrile bond in each of
366 gezelter 4039 the clusters were used to fit Morse potentials, and the frequencies
367 gezelter 4035 were obtained from the $0 \rightarrow 1$ transition for the energy
368     levels for this potential.\cite{Morse:1929xy} To obtain a spectrum,
369     each of the frequencies was convoluted with a Lorentzian lineshape
370     with a width of 1.5 $\mathrm{cm}^{-1}$. Available computing resources
371     limited the sampling to 67 clusters for the zero-field spectrum, and
372     59 for the full field. Comparisons of the quantum mechanical spectrum
373     to the classical are shown in figure \ref{fig:spectrum}.
374 gezelter 4033
375 gezelter 4029 \subsection{CN frequencies from potential-frequency maps}
376 gezelter 4039
377 gezelter 4035 One approach which has been used to successfully analyze the spectrum
378     of nitrile and thiocyanate probes in aqueous environments was
379     developed by Choi {\it et al.}~\cite{Choi:2008cr,Oh:2008fk} This
380     method involves finding a multi-parameter fit that maps between the
381     local electrostatic potential at selected sites surrounding the
382     nitrile bond and the vibrational frequency of that bond obtained from
383     more expensive {\it ab initio} methods. This approach is similar in
384 gezelter 4042 character to the field-frequency maps developed by the Skinner group
385     for OH stretches in liquid water.\cite{Corcelli:2004ai,Auer:2007dp}
386 gezelter 4035
387     To use the potential-frequency maps, the local electrostatic
388 gezelter 4039 potential, $\phi_a$, is computed at 20 sites ($a = 1 \rightarrow 20$)
389 gezelter 4035 that surround the nitrile bond,
390 gezelter 4029 \begin{equation}
391 gezelter 4035 \phi_{a} = \frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_{0}} \sum_{j}
392     \frac{q_j}{\left|r_{aj}\right|}.
393 gezelter 4029 \end{equation}
394 gezelter 4036 Here $q_j$ is the partial site on atom $j$ (residing on a different
395     molecule) and $r_{aj}$ is the distance between site $a$ and atom $j$.
396     The original map was parameterized in liquid water and comprises a set
397     of parameters, $l_a$, that predict the shift in nitrile peak
398     frequency,
399 gezelter 4029 \begin{equation}
400 gezelter 4036 \delta\tilde{\nu} =\sum^{20}_{a=1} l_{a}\phi_{a}.
401 gezelter 4029 \end{equation}
402 gezelter 4035
403 gezelter 4039 The simulations of 5CB were carried out in the presence of
404 gezelter 4036 externally-applied uniform electric fields. Although uniform fields
405     exert forces on charge sites, they only contribute to the potential if
406     one defines a reference point that can serve as an origin. One simple
407 gezelter 4039 modification to the potential at each of the probe sites is to use the
408 gezelter 4036 centroid of the \ce{CN} bond as the origin for that site,
409 gezelter 4029 \begin{equation}
410 gezelter 4036 \phi_a^\prime = \phi_a + \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_{0}} \vec{E} \cdot
411     \left(\vec{r}_a - \vec{r}_\ce{CN} \right)
412 gezelter 4029 \end{equation}
413 gezelter 4036 where $\vec{E}$ is the uniform electric field, $\left( \vec{r}_{a} -
414     \vec{r}_\ce{CN} \right)$ is the displacement between the
415     cooridinates described by Choi {\it et
416     al.}~\cite{Choi:2008cr,Oh:2008fk} and the \ce{CN} bond centroid.
417     $\phi_a^\prime$ then contains an effective potential contributed by
418     the uniform field in addition to the local potential contributions
419     from other molecules.
420 gezelter 4029
421 gezelter 4039 The sites $\{\vec{r}_a\}$ and weights $\left\{l_a \right\}$
422     developed by Choi {\it et al.}~\cite{Choi:2008cr,Oh:2008fk} are quite
423     symmetric around the \ce{CN} centroid, and even at large uniform field
424     values we observed nearly-complete cancellation of the potenial
425     contributions from the uniform field. In order to utilize the
426     potential-frequency maps for this problem, one would therefore need
427     extensive reparameterization of the maps to include explicit
428     contributions from the external field. This reparameterization is
429     outside the scope of the current work, but would make a useful
430     addition to the potential-frequency map approach.
431 gezelter 4029
432     \subsection{CN frequencies from bond length autocorrelation functions}
433    
434 gezelter 4039 The distribution of nitrile vibrational frequencies can also be found
435 gezelter 4036 using classical time correlation functions. This was done by
436     replacing the rigid \ce{CN} bond with a flexible Morse oscillator
437     described in Eq. \ref{eq:morse}. Since the systems were perturbed by
438     the addition of a flexible high-frequency bond, they were allowed to
439     re-equilibrate in the canonical (NVT) ensemble for 100 ps with 1 fs
440     timesteps. After equilibration, each configuration was run in the
441     microcanonical (NVE) ensemble for 20 ps. Configurations sampled every
442     fs were then used to compute bond-length autocorrelation functions,
443 gezelter 4007 \begin{equation}
444 gezelter 4036 C(t) = \langle \delta r(t) \cdot \delta r(0) ) \rangle
445 gezelter 4007 \end{equation}
446     %
447 gezelter 4036 where $\delta r(t) = r(t) - r_0$ is the deviation from the equilibrium
448 gezelter 4048 bond distance at time $t$. Because the other atomic sites have very
449     small partial charges, this correlation function is an approximation
450     to the dipole autocorrelation function for the molecule, which would
451     be particularly relevant to computing the IR spectrum. Ten
452     statistically-independent correlation functions were obtained by
453     allowing the systems to run 10 ns with rigid \ce{CN} bonds followed by
454     120 ps equilibration and data collection using the flexible \ce{CN}
455     bonds. This process was repeated 10 times, and the total sampling
456     time, from sample preparation to final configurations, exceeded 150 ns
457     for each of the field strengths investigated.
458 gezelter 4007
459 gezelter 4036 The correlation functions were filtered using exponential apodization
460 gezelter 4042 functions,\cite{FILLER:1964yg} $f(t) = e^{-|t|/c}$, with a time
461 gezelter 4048 constant, $c =$ 3.5 ps, and were Fourier transformed to yield a
462 gezelter 4039 spectrum,
463 gezelter 4036 \begin{equation}
464     I(\omega) = \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} C(t) f(t) e^{-i \omega t} dt.
465     \end{equation}
466     The sample-averaged classical nitrile spectrum can be seen in Figure
467     \ref{fig:spectra}. Note that the Morse oscillator parameters listed
468 gezelter 4039 above yield a natural frequency of 2358 $\mathrm{cm}^{-1}$, somewhat
469     higher than the experimental peak near 2226 $\mathrm{cm}^{-1}$. This
470     shift does not effect the ability to qualitatively compare peaks from
471     the classical and quantum mechanical approaches, so the classical
472     spectra are shown as a shift relative to the natural oscillation of
473     the Morse bond.
474 gezelter 4007
475 jmarr 4013 \begin{figure}
476 gezelter 4036 \includegraphics[width=3.25in]{Convolved}
477 jmarr 4013 \includegraphics[width=3.25in]{2Spectra}
478 gezelter 4039 \caption{Quantum mechanical nitrile spectrum for the no-field simulation
479     (black) and the full field simulation (red). The lower panel
480     shows the corresponding classical bond-length autocorrelation
481     spectrum for the flexible nitrile measured relative to the natural
482     frequency for the flexible bond.}
483 gezelter 4036 \label{fig:spectra}
484 jmarr 4013 \end{figure}
485 jmarr 4020
486 gezelter 4036 Note that due to electrostatic interactions, the classical approach
487     implicitly couples \ce{CN} vibrations to the same vibrational mode on
488     other nearby molecules. This coupling is not handled in the {\it ab
489     initio} cluster approach.
490 jmarr 4020
491 gezelter 4036 \section{Discussion}
492    
493 gezelter 4048 Our simulations show that the united-atom model can reproduce the
494 gezelter 4042 field-induced nematic ordering of the 4-cyano-4'-pentylbiphenyl.
495 gezelter 4052 Because we are simulating a very small electrode separation (5~nm), a
496     voltage drop as low as 1.2~V was sufficient to induce the phase
497     change. This potential is significantly smaller than the 500~V that is
498     known to cause dielectric breakdown in 5CB,\cite{XXX} and suggests
499     that by using close electrode separation, it would be relatively
500     straightforward to observe the nitrile Stark shift in 5CB.
501 jmarr 4023
502 gezelter 4043 Both the classical correlation function and the isolated cluster
503 gezelter 4052 approaches to estimating the IR spectrum show that a small population
504     of nitrile stretches shift by $\sim 40 \mathrm{cm}^{-1}$ to the red of
505     the unperturbed vibrational line. To understand the origin of this
506     shift, a more complete picture of the spatial ordering around the
507     nitrile bonds is required. We have computed the angle-dependent pair
508     distribution functions,
509 gezelter 4040 \begin{align}
510     g(r, \cos \omega) = & \frac{1}{\rho N} \left< \sum_{i}
511     \sum_{j} \delta \left(r - r_{ij}\right) \delta\left(\cos \omega_{ij} -
512     \cos \omega\right) \right> \\ \nonumber \\
513     g(r, \cos \theta) = & \frac{1}{\rho N} \left< \sum_{i}
514     \sum_{j} \delta \left(r - r_{ij}\right) \delta\left(\cos \theta_{i} -
515     \cos \theta \right) \right>
516     \end{align}
517 gezelter 4052 which provide information about the joint spatial and angular
518     correlations present in the system. The angles $\omega$ and $\theta$
519     are defined by vectors along the CN axis of each nitrile bond (see
520     figure \ref{fig:definition}).
521 gezelter 4039 \begin{figure}
522 gezelter 4052 \includegraphics[width=4in]{definition}
523 gezelter 4040 \caption{Definitions of the angles between two nitrile bonds.}
524 gezelter 4039 \label{fig:definition}
525     \end{figure}
526    
527 gezelter 4052 The primary structural effect of the field-induced phase transition is
528     apparent in figure \ref{fig:gofromega}. The nematic ordering transfers
529     population from the perpendicular ($\cos\omega\approx 0$) and
530     anti-aligned ($\cos\omega\approx -1$) to the nitrile-alinged peak
531     near $\cos\omega\approx 1$, leaving most other features undisturbed. This
532     change is visible in the simulations as an increased population of
533     aligned nitrile bonds in the first solvation shell.
534 gezelter 4039 \begin{figure}
535     \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{Figure4}
536     \caption{Contours of the angle-dependent pair distribution functions
537 gezelter 4052 for nitrile bonds on 5CB in the no field (upper panel) and full
538 gezelter 4039 field (lower panel) simulations. Dark areas signify regions of
539     enhanced density, while light areas signify depletion relative to
540     the bulk density.}
541     \label{fig:gofromega}
542     \end{figure}
543 gezelter 4052 Although it is certainly possible that the coupling between
544     closely-spaced nitrile pairs is responsible for some of the red-shift,
545     that is not the only structural change that is taking place. The
546     second two-dimensional pair distribution function, $g(r,\cos\theta)$,
547     shows that nematic ordering also transfers population that is directly
548     in line with the nitrile bond (see figure \ref{fig:gofrtheta}) to the
549     sides of the molecule, thereby freeing steric blockage can directly
550     influence the nitrile vibration. We are suggesting here that the
551     nematic ordering provides an anti-caging of the nitrile vibration, and
552     given that the oscillator is fairly anharmonic, this provides a
553     fraction of the nitrile bonds with a significant red-shift.
554 gezelter 4048 \begin{figure}
555 gezelter 4051 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{Figure6}
556 gezelter 4048 \caption{Contours of the angle-dependent pair distribution function,
557 gezelter 4052 $g(r,\cos \theta)$, for finding any other atom at a distance and
558     angular deviation from the center of a nitrile bond. The top edge
559     of each contour plot corresponds to local density along the
560     direction of the nitrogen in the CN bond, while the bottom is in
561     the direction of the carbon atom. Bottom panel: $g(z)$ data taken
562     by following the \ce{C -> N} vector for each nitrile bond shows
563     that the field-induced phase transition reduces the population of
564     atoms that are directly in line with the nitrogen motion.}
565 gezelter 4051 \label{fig:gofrtheta}
566 gezelter 4048 \end{figure}
567    
568 gezelter 4052 The cause of this shift does not appear to be related to the alignment
569     of those nitrile bonds with the field, but rather to the change in
570     local environment that is brought about by the isotropic-nematic
571     transition. We have compared configurations for many of the cluster
572     calculations that exhibited the frequencies between (2190 and 2215
573     $\mathrm{cm}^{-1}$) , and have observed some similar features. The
574     lowest frequencies appear to come from configurations which have
575     nearly-empty pockets directly opposite the nitrogen atom from the
576     nitrile carbon. Because we have so few clusters, this is certainly not
577     quantitative confirmation of this effect.
578 gezelter 4048
579    
580     While this makes the application of nitrile Stark effects in
581     simulations without water harder, these data show
582     that it is not a deal breaker. The classically calculated nitrile
583     spectrum shows changes in the spectra that will be easily seen through
584     experimental routes. It indicates a shifted peak lower in energy
585     should arise. This peak is a few wavenumbers from the leading edge of
586     the larger peak and almost 75 wavenumbers from the center. This
587     seperation between the two peaks means experimental results will show
588     an easily resolved peak.
589    
590     The Gaussian derived spectra do indicate an applied field
591     and subsiquent phase change does cause a narrowing of freuency
592     distrobution. With narrowing, it would indicate an increased
593     homogeneous distrobution of the local field near the nitrile.
594    
595    
596    
597 gezelter 4007 \section{Conclusions}
598 jmarr 4024 Field dependent changes
599 gezelter 4036
600     \section{Acknowledgements}
601     The authors thank Steven Corcelli for helpful comments and
602     suggestions. Support for this project was provided by the National
603     Science Foundation under grant CHE-0848243. Computational time was
604     provided by the Center for Research Computing (CRC) at the University
605     of Notre Dame.
606    
607 gezelter 4007 \newpage
608    
609     \bibliography{5CB}
610    
611     \end{doublespace}
612     \end{document}