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41
42 \title{Nitrile vibrations as reporters of field-induced phase
43 transitions in 4-cyano-4'-pentylbiphenyl (5CB)}
44 \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 4-cyano-4'-pentylbiphenyl (5CB) is a liquid-crystal-forming compound
62 with a terminal nitrile group aligned with the long axis of the
63 molecule. Simulations of condensed-phase 5CB were carried out both
64 with and without applied electric fields to provide an understanding
65 of the the Stark shift of the terminal nitrile group. A
66 field-induced isotropic-nematic phase transition was observed in the
67 simulations, and the effects of this transition on the distribution
68 of nitrile frequencies were computed. Classical bond displacement
69 correlation functions exhibit a $\sim 40 \mathrm{~cm}^{-1}$ red
70 shift of a portion of the main nitrile peak, and this shift was
71 observed only when the fields were large enough to induce
72 orientational ordering of the bulk phase. Our simulations appear to
73 indicate that phase-induced changes to the local surroundings are a
74 larger contribution to the change in the nitrile spectrum than
75 direct field contributions.
76 \end{abstract}
77
78 \newpage
79
80 \section{Introduction}
81
82 Nitrile groups can serve as very precise electric field reporters via
83 their distinctive Raman and IR signatures.\cite{Boxer:2009xw} The
84 triple bond between the nitrogen and the carbon atom is very sensitive
85 to local field changes and has been observed to have a direct impact
86 on the peak position within the spectrum. The Stark shift in the
87 spectrum can be quantified and mapped onto a field that is impinging
88 upon the nitrile bond. This has been used extensively in biological
89 systems like proteins and enzymes.\cite{Tucker:2004qq,Webb:2008kn}
90
91 The response of nitrile groups to electric fields has now been
92 investigated for a number of small molecules,\cite{Andrews:2000qv} as
93 well as in biochemical settings, where nitrile groups can act as
94 minimally invasive probes of structure and
95 dynamics.\cite{Lindquist:2009fk,Fafarman:2010dq} The vibrational Stark
96 effect has also been used to study the effects of electric fields on
97 nitrile-containing self-assembled monolayers at metallic
98 interfaces.\cite{Oklejas:2002uq,Schkolnik:2012ty}
99
100 Recently 4-cyano-4'-pentylbiphenyl (5CB), a liquid crystalline
101 molecule with a terminal nitrile group, has seen renewed interest as
102 one way to impart order on the surfactant interfaces of
103 nanodroplets,\cite{Moreno-Razo:2012rz} or to drive surface-ordering
104 that can be used to promote particular kinds of
105 self-assembly.\cite{PhysRevLett.111.227801} The nitrile group in 5CB
106 is a particularly interesting case for studying electric field
107 effects, as 5CB exhibits an isotropic to nematic phase transition that
108 can be triggered by the application of an external field near room
109 temperature.\cite{Gray:1973ca,Hatta:1991ee} This presents the
110 possiblity that the field-induced changes in the local environment
111 could have dramatic effects on the vibrations of this particular CN
112 bond. Although the infrared spectroscopy of 5CB has been
113 well-investigated, particularly as a measure of the kinetics of the
114 phase transition,\cite{Leyte:1997zl} the 5CB nitrile group has not yet
115 seen the detailed theoretical treatment that biologically-relevant
116 small molecules have
117 received.\cite{Lindquist:2008bh,Lindquist:2008qf,Oh:2008fk,Choi:2008cr,Waegele:2010ve}
118
119 The fundamental characteristic of liquid crystal mesophases is that
120 they maintain some degree of orientational order while translational
121 order is limited or absent. This orientational order produces a
122 complex direction-dependent response to external perturbations like
123 electric fields and mechanical distortions. The anisotropy of the
124 macroscopic phases originates in the anisotropy of the constituent
125 molecules, which typically have highly non-spherical structures with a
126 significant degree of internal rigidity. In nematic phases, rod-like
127 molecules are orientationally ordered with isotropic distributions of
128 molecular centers of mass. For example, 5CB has a solid to nematic
129 phase transition at 18C and a nematic to isotropic transition at
130 35C.\cite{Gray:1973ca}
131
132 In smectic phases, the molecules arrange themselves into layers with
133 their long (symmetry) axis normal ($S_{A}$) or tilted ($S_{C}$) with
134 respect to the layer planes. The behavior of the $S_{A}$ phase can be
135 partially explained with models mainly based on geometric factors and
136 van der Waals interactions. The Gay-Berne potential, in particular,
137 has been widely used in the liquid crystal community to describe this
138 anisotropic phase
139 behavior.~\cite{Gay:1981yu,Berne72,Kushick:1976xy,Luckhurst90,Cleaver:1996rt}
140 However, these simple models are insufficient to describe liquid
141 crystal phases which exhibit more complex polymorphic nature.
142 Molecules which form $S_{A}$ phases can exhibit a wide variety of
143 subphases like monolayers ($S_{A1}$), uniform bilayers ($S_{A2}$),
144 partial bilayers ($S_{\tilde A}$) as well as interdigitated bilayers
145 ($S_{A_{d}}$), and often have a terminal cyano or nitro group. In
146 particular, lyotropic liquid crystals (those exhibiting liquid crystal
147 phase transition as a function of water concentration), often have
148 polar head groups or zwitterionic charge separated groups that result
149 in strong dipolar interactions,\cite{Collings:1997rz} and terminal cyano
150 groups (like the one in 5CB) can induce permanent longitudinal
151 dipoles.\cite{Levelut:1981eu}
152
153 Macroscopic electric fields applied using electrodes on opposing sides
154 of a sample of 5CB have demonstrated the phase change of the molecule
155 as a function of electric field.\cite{Lim:2006xq} These previous
156 studies have shown the nitrile group serves as an excellent indicator
157 of the molecular orientation within the applied field. Lee {\it et
158 al.}~showed a 180 degree change in field direction could be probed
159 with the nitrile peak intensity as it changed along with molecular
160 alignment in the field.\cite{Lee:2006qd,Leyte:1997zl}
161
162 While these macroscopic fields work well at indicating the bulk
163 response, the atomic scale response has not been studied. With the
164 advent of nano-electrodes and coupling them with atomic force
165 microscopy, control of electric fields applied across nanometer
166 distances is now possible.\cite{citation1} While macroscopic fields
167 are insufficient to cause a Stark effect without dielectric breakdown
168 of the material, small fields across nanometer-sized gaps may be of
169 sufficient strength. For a gap of 5 nm between a lower electrode
170 having a nanoelectrode placed near it via an atomic force microscope,
171 a potential of 1 V applied across the electrodes is equivalent to a
172 field of 2x10\textsuperscript{8} $\frac{V}{M}$. This field is
173 certainly strong enough to cause the isotropic-nematic phase change
174 and as well as Stark tuning of the nitrile bond. This should be
175 readily visible experimentally through Raman or IR spectroscopy.
176
177 In the sections that follow, we outline a series of coarse-grained
178 classical molecular dynamics simulations of 5CB that were done in the
179 presence of static electric fields. These simulations were then
180 coupled with both {\it ab intio} calculations of CN-deformations and
181 classical bond-length correlation functions to predict spectral
182 shifts. These predictions made should be easily varifiable with
183 scanning electrochemical microscopy experiments.
184
185 \section{Computational Details}
186 The force field used for 5CB was taken from Guo {\it et
187 al.}\cite{Zhang:2011hh} However, for most of the simulations, each
188 of the phenyl rings was treated as a rigid body to allow for larger
189 time steps and very long simulation times. The geometries of the
190 rigid bodies were taken from equilibrium bond distances and angles.
191 Although the phenyl rings were held rigid, bonds, bends, torsions and
192 inversion centers that involved atoms in these substructures (but with
193 connectivity to the rest of the molecule) were still included in the
194 potential and force calculations.
195
196 Periodic simulations cells containing 270 molecules in random
197 orientations were constructed and were locked at experimental
198 densities. Electrostatic interactions were computed using damped
199 shifted force (DSF) electrostatics.\cite{Fennell:2006zl} The molecules
200 were equilibrated for 1~ns at a temperature of 300K. Simulations with
201 applied fields were carried out in the microcanonical (NVE) ensemble
202 with an energy corresponding to the average energy from the canonical
203 (NVT) equilibration runs. Typical applied-field runs were more than
204 60ns in length.
205
206 Static electric fields with magnitudes similar to what would be
207 available in an experimental setup were applied to the different
208 simulations. With an assumed electrode seperation of 5 nm and an
209 electrostatic potential that is limited by the voltage required to
210 split water (1.23V), the maximum realistic field that could be applied
211 is $\sim 0.024$ V/\AA. Three field environments were investigated:
212 (1) no field applied, (2) partial field = 0.01 V/\AA\ , and (3) full
213 field = 0.024 V/\AA\ .
214
215 After the systems had come to equilibrium under the applied fields,
216 additional simulations were carried out with a flexible (Morse)
217 nitrile bond,
218 \begin{displaymath}
219 V(r_\ce{CN}) = D_e \left(1 - e^{-\beta (r_\ce{CN}-r_e)}\right)^2
220 \label{eq:morse}
221 \end{displaymath}
222 where $r_e= 1.157437$ \AA , $D_e = 212.95 \mathrm{~kcal~} /
223 \mathrm{mol}^{-1}$ and $\beta = 2.67566 $\AA~$^{-1}$. These
224 parameters correspond to a vibrational frequency of $2358
225 \mathrm{~cm}^{-1}$, somewhat higher than the experimental
226 frequency. The flexible nitrile moiety required simulation time steps
227 of 1~fs, so the additional flexibility was introducuced only after the
228 rigid systems had come to equilibrium under the applied fields.
229 Whenever time correlation functions were computed from the flexible
230 simulations, statistically-independent configurations were sampled
231 from the last ns of the induced-field runs. These configurations were
232 then equilibrated with the flexible nitrile moiety for 100 ps, and
233 time correlation functions were computed using data sampled from an
234 additional 200 ps of run time carried out in the microcanonical
235 ensemble.
236
237 \section{Field-induced Nematic Ordering}
238
239 In order to characterize the orientational ordering of the system, the
240 primary quantity of interest is the nematic (orientational) order
241 parameter. This was determined using the tensor
242 \begin{equation}
243 Q_{\alpha \beta} = \frac{1}{2N} \sum_{i=1}^{N} \left(3 \hat{e}_{i
244 \alpha} \hat{e}_{i \beta} - \delta_{\alpha \beta} \right)
245 \end{equation}
246 where $\alpha, \beta = x, y, z$, and $\hat{e}_i$ is the molecular
247 end-to-end unit vector for molecule $i$. The nematic order parameter
248 $S$ is the largest eigenvalue of $Q_{\alpha \beta}$, and the
249 corresponding eigenvector defines the director axis for the phase.
250 $S$ takes on values close to 1 in highly ordered (smectic A) phases,
251 but falls to zero for isotropic fluids. Note that the nitrogen and
252 the terminal chain atom were used to define the vectors for each
253 molecule, so the typical order parameters are lower than if one
254 defined a vector using only the rigid core of the molecule. In
255 nematic phases, typical values for $S$ are close to 0.5.
256
257 The field-induced phase transition can be clearly seen over the course
258 of a 60 ns equilibration runs in figure \ref{fig:orderParameter}. All
259 three of the systems started in a random (isotropic) packing, with
260 order parameters near 0.2. Over the course 10 ns, the full field
261 causes an alignment of the molecules (due primarily to the interaction
262 of the nitrile group dipole with the electric field). Once this
263 system began exhibiting nematic ordering, the orientational order
264 parameter became stable for the remaining 150 ns of simulation time.
265 It is possible that the partial-field simulation is meta-stable and
266 given enough time, it would eventually find a nematic-ordered phase,
267 but the partial-field simulation was stable as an isotropic phase for
268 the full duration of a 60 ns simulation. Ellipsoidal renderings of the
269 final configurations of the runs shows that the full-field (0.024
270 V/\AA\ ) experienced a isotropic-nematic phase transition and has
271 ordered with a director axis that is parallel to the direction of the
272 applied field.
273
274 \begin{figure}[H]
275 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{Figure1}
276 \caption{Evolution of the orientational order parameters for the
277 no-field, partial field, and full field simulations over the
278 course of 60 ns. Each simulation was started from a
279 statistically-independent isotropic configuration. On the right
280 are ellipsoids representing the final configurations at three
281 different field strengths: zero field (bottom), partial field
282 (middle), and full field (top)}
283 \label{fig:orderParameter}
284 \end{figure}
285
286
287 \section{Sampling the CN bond frequency}
288
289 The vibrational frequency of the nitrile bond in 5CB depends on
290 features of the local solvent environment of the individual molecules
291 as well as the bond's orientation relative to the applied field. The
292 primary quantity of interest for interpreting the condensed phase
293 spectrum of this vibration is the distribution of frequencies
294 exhibited by the 5CB nitrile bond under the different electric fields.
295 Three distinct methods for mapping classical simulations onto
296 vibrational spectra were brought to bear on these simulations:
297 \begin{enumerate}
298 \item Isolated 5CB molecules and their immediate surroundings were
299 extracted from the simulations. These nitrile bonds were stretched
300 and single-point {\em ab initio} calculations were used to obtain
301 Morse-oscillator fits for the local vibrational motion along that
302 bond.
303 \item The potential - frequency maps developed by Cho {\it et
304 al.}~\cite{Oh:2008fk} for nitrile moieties in water were
305 investigated. This method involves mapping the electrostatic
306 potential around the bond to the vibrational frequency, and is
307 similar in approach to field-frequency maps that were pioneered by
308 Skinner {\it et al.}\cite{XXXX}
309 \item Classical bond-length autocorrelation functions were Fourier
310 transformed to directly obtain the vibrational spectrum from
311 molecular dynamics simulations.
312 \end{enumerate}
313
314 \subsection{CN frequencies from isolated clusters}
315 The size of the periodic condensed phase system prevented direct
316 computation of the complete library of nitrile bond frequencies using
317 {\it ab initio} methods. In order to sample the nitrile frequencies
318 present in the condensed-phase, individual molecules were selected
319 randomly to serve as the center of a local (gas phase) cluster. To
320 include steric, electrostatic, and other effects from molecules
321 located near the targeted nitrile group, portions of other molecules
322 nearest to the nitrile group were included in the quantum mechanical
323 calculations. The surrounding solvent molecules were divided into
324 ``body'' (the two phenyl rings and the nitrile bond) and ``tail'' (the
325 alkyl chain). Any molecule which had a body atom within 6~\AA\ of the
326 midpoint of the target nitrile bond had its own molecular body (the
327 4-cyano-biphenyl moiety) included in the configuration. Likewise, the
328 entire alkyl tail was included if any tail atom was within 4~\AA\ of
329 the target nitrile bond. If tail atoms (but no body atoms) were
330 included within these distances, only the tail was included as a
331 capped propane molecule.
332
333 \begin{figure}[H]
334 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{Figure2}
335 \caption{Cluster calculations were performed on randomly sampled 5CB
336 molecules (shown in red) from each of the simulations. Surrounding
337 molecular bodies were included if any body atoms were within 6
338 \AA\ of the target nitrile bond, and tails were included if they
339 were within 4 \AA. Included portions of these molecules are shown
340 in green. The CN bond on the target molecule was stretched and
341 compressed, and the resulting single point energies were fit to
342 Morse oscillators to obtain a distribution of frequencies.}
343 \label{fig:cluster}
344 \end{figure}
345
346 Inferred hydrogen atom locations were added to the cluster geometries,
347 and the nitrile bond was stretched from 0.87 to 1.52~\AA\ at
348 increments of 0.05~\AA. This generated 13 configurations per gas phase
349 cluster. Single-point energies were computed using the B3LYP
350 functional~\cite{Becke:1993kq,Lee:1988qf} and the 6-311++G(d,p) basis
351 set. For the cluster configurations that had been generated from
352 molecular dynamics running under applied fields, the density
353 functional calculations had a field of $5 \times 10^{-4}$ atomic units
354 ($E_h / (e a_0)$) applied in the $+z$ direction in order to match the
355 molecular dynamics simulations.
356
357 The energies for the stretched / compressed nitrile bond in each of
358 the clusters were used to fit Morse potentials, and the frequencies
359 were obtained from the $0 \rightarrow 1$ transition for the energy
360 levels for this potential.\cite{Morse:1929xy} To obtain a spectrum,
361 each of the frequencies was convoluted with a Lorentzian lineshape
362 with a width of 1.5 $\mathrm{cm}^{-1}$. Available computing resources
363 limited the sampling to 67 clusters for the zero-field spectrum, and
364 59 for the full field. Comparisons of the quantum mechanical spectrum
365 to the classical are shown in figure \ref{fig:spectrum}.
366
367 \subsection{CN frequencies from potential-frequency maps}
368
369 One approach which has been used to successfully analyze the spectrum
370 of nitrile and thiocyanate probes in aqueous environments was
371 developed by Choi {\it et al.}~\cite{Choi:2008cr,Oh:2008fk} This
372 method involves finding a multi-parameter fit that maps between the
373 local electrostatic potential at selected sites surrounding the
374 nitrile bond and the vibrational frequency of that bond obtained from
375 more expensive {\it ab initio} methods. This approach is similar in
376 character to the field-frequency maps developed by Skinner {\it et
377 al.} for OH stretches in liquid water.\cite{XXXX}
378
379 To use the potential-frequency maps, the local electrostatic
380 potential, $\phi_a$, is computed at 20 sites ($a = 1 \rightarrow 20$)
381 that surround the nitrile bond,
382 \begin{equation}
383 \phi_{a} = \frac{1}{4\pi \epsilon_{0}} \sum_{j}
384 \frac{q_j}{\left|r_{aj}\right|}.
385 \end{equation}
386 Here $q_j$ is the partial site on atom $j$ (residing on a different
387 molecule) and $r_{aj}$ is the distance between site $a$ and atom $j$.
388 The original map was parameterized in liquid water and comprises a set
389 of parameters, $l_a$, that predict the shift in nitrile peak
390 frequency,
391 \begin{equation}
392 \delta\tilde{\nu} =\sum^{20}_{a=1} l_{a}\phi_{a}.
393 \end{equation}
394
395 The simulations of 5CB were carried out in the presence of
396 externally-applied uniform electric fields. Although uniform fields
397 exert forces on charge sites, they only contribute to the potential if
398 one defines a reference point that can serve as an origin. One simple
399 modification to the potential at each of the probe sites is to use the
400 centroid of the \ce{CN} bond as the origin for that site,
401 \begin{equation}
402 \phi_a^\prime = \phi_a + \frac{1}{4\pi\epsilon_{0}} \vec{E} \cdot
403 \left(\vec{r}_a - \vec{r}_\ce{CN} \right)
404 \end{equation}
405 where $\vec{E}$ is the uniform electric field, $\left( \vec{r}_{a} -
406 \vec{r}_\ce{CN} \right)$ is the displacement between the
407 cooridinates described by Choi {\it et
408 al.}~\cite{Choi:2008cr,Oh:2008fk} and the \ce{CN} bond centroid.
409 $\phi_a^\prime$ then contains an effective potential contributed by
410 the uniform field in addition to the local potential contributions
411 from other molecules.
412
413 The sites $\{\vec{r}_a\}$ and weights $\left\{l_a \right\}$
414 developed by Choi {\it et al.}~\cite{Choi:2008cr,Oh:2008fk} are quite
415 symmetric around the \ce{CN} centroid, and even at large uniform field
416 values we observed nearly-complete cancellation of the potenial
417 contributions from the uniform field. In order to utilize the
418 potential-frequency maps for this problem, one would therefore need
419 extensive reparameterization of the maps to include explicit
420 contributions from the external field. This reparameterization is
421 outside the scope of the current work, but would make a useful
422 addition to the potential-frequency map approach.
423
424 \subsection{CN frequencies from bond length autocorrelation functions}
425
426 The distribution of nitrile vibrational frequencies can also be found
427 using classical time correlation functions. This was done by
428 replacing the rigid \ce{CN} bond with a flexible Morse oscillator
429 described in Eq. \ref{eq:morse}. Since the systems were perturbed by
430 the addition of a flexible high-frequency bond, they were allowed to
431 re-equilibrate in the canonical (NVT) ensemble for 100 ps with 1 fs
432 timesteps. After equilibration, each configuration was run in the
433 microcanonical (NVE) ensemble for 20 ps. Configurations sampled every
434 fs were then used to compute bond-length autocorrelation functions,
435 \begin{equation}
436 C(t) = \langle \delta r(t) \cdot \delta r(0) ) \rangle
437 \end{equation}
438 %
439 where $\delta r(t) = r(t) - r_0$ is the deviation from the equilibrium
440 bond distance at time $t$. Ten statistically-independent correlation
441 functions were obtained by allowing the systems to run 10 ns with
442 rigid \ce{CN} bonds followed by 120 ps equilibration and data
443 collection using the flexible \ce{CN} bonds, and repeating this
444 process. The total sampling time, from sample preparation to final
445 configurations, exceeded 150 ns for each of the field strengths
446 investigated.
447
448 The correlation functions were filtered using exponential apodization
449 functions,\cite{FILLER:1964yg} $f(t) = e^{-c |t|}$, with a time
450 constant, $c =$ 6 ps, and were Fourier transformed to yield a
451 spectrum,
452 \begin{equation}
453 I(\omega) = \int_{-\infty}^{\infty} C(t) f(t) e^{-i \omega t} dt.
454 \end{equation}
455 The sample-averaged classical nitrile spectrum can be seen in Figure
456 \ref{fig:spectra}. Note that the Morse oscillator parameters listed
457 above yield a natural frequency of 2358 $\mathrm{cm}^{-1}$, somewhat
458 higher than the experimental peak near 2226 $\mathrm{cm}^{-1}$. This
459 shift does not effect the ability to qualitatively compare peaks from
460 the classical and quantum mechanical approaches, so the classical
461 spectra are shown as a shift relative to the natural oscillation of
462 the Morse bond.
463
464 \begin{figure}
465 \includegraphics[width=3.25in]{Convolved}
466 \includegraphics[width=3.25in]{2Spectra}
467 \caption{Quantum mechanical nitrile spectrum for the no-field simulation
468 (black) and the full field simulation (red). The lower panel
469 shows the corresponding classical bond-length autocorrelation
470 spectrum for the flexible nitrile measured relative to the natural
471 frequency for the flexible bond.}
472 \label{fig:spectra}
473 \end{figure}
474
475 Note that due to electrostatic interactions, the classical approach
476 implicitly couples \ce{CN} vibrations to the same vibrational mode on
477 other nearby molecules. This coupling is not handled in the {\it ab
478 initio} cluster approach.
479
480 \section{Discussion}
481
482
483 Observation of Field-induced nematic ordering
484 Ordering corresponds to shift of a portion of the nitrile spectrum to
485 the red.
486 At the same time, the system exhibits an increase in aligned and anti-a
487
488
489
490 Since no explicit dependence was observed between the calculated
491 frequency and the electric field, it was not a viable route for the
492 calculation of a nitrile spectrum. Instead, the frequencies were taken
493 and convolved together with a lorentzian line shape applied around the
494 frequency value. These spectra are seen below in Figure 4. While the
495 spectrum without a field is lower in intensity and is almost bimodel
496 in distrobution, the external field spectrum is much more
497 unimodel. This tighter clustering has the affect of increasing the
498 intensity around 2226 cm\textsuperscript{-1} where the peak is
499 centered. The external field also has fewer frequencies of higher
500 energy in the spectrum. Unlike the the zero field, where some
501 frequencies reach as high as 2280 cm\textsuperscript{-1}.
502
503 Interestingly, the field that is needed to switch the phase of 5CB
504 macroscopically is larger than 1 V. However, in this case, only a
505 voltage of 1.2 V was need to induce a phase change. This is impart due
506 to the short distance of 5 nm the field is being applied across. At
507 such a small distance, the field is much larger than the macroscopic
508 and thus easily induces a field dependent phase change. However, this
509 field will not cause a breakdown of the 5CB since electrochemistry
510 studies have shown that it can be used in the presence of fields as
511 high as 500 V macroscopically. This large of a field near the surface
512 of the elctrode would cause breakdown of 5CB if it could happen.
513
514 The absence of any electric field dependency of the freuquency with
515 the Gaussian simulations is interesting. A large base of research has been
516 built upon the known tuning of the nitrile bond as the local field
517 changes. This difference may be due to the absence of water or a
518 molecule that induces a large internal field. Liquid water is known to have a very high internal field which
519 is much larger than the internal fields of neat 5CB. Even though the
520 application of Gaussian simulations followed by mapping it to
521 some classical parameter is easy and straight forward, this system
522 illistrates how that 'go to' method can break down.
523
524 While this makes the application of nitrile Stark effects in
525 simulations without water harder, these data show
526 that it is not a deal breaker. The classically calculated nitrile
527 spectrum shows changes in the spectra that will be easily seen through
528 experimental routes. It indicates a shifted peak lower in energy
529 should arise. This peak is a few wavenumbers from the leading edge of
530 the larger peak and almost 75 wavenumbers from the center. This
531 seperation between the two peaks means experimental results will show
532 an easily resolved peak.
533
534 The Gaussian derived spectra do indicate an applied field
535 and subsiquent phase change does cause a narrowing of freuency
536 distrobution. With narrowing, it would indicate an increased
537 homogeneous distrobution of the local field near the nitrile.
538
539
540 The angle-dependent pair distribution function,
541 \begin{equation}
542 g(r, \cos \omega) = \frac{1}{\rho N} \left< \sum_{i}
543 \sum_{j} \delta \left(r - r_{ij}\right) \delta\left(\cos \omega_{ij} - \cos \omega\right) \right>
544 \end{equation}
545 provides information about the spatial and angular correlations in the
546 system. The angle $\omega$ is defined by vectors along the CN axis of
547 each nitrile bond (see figure \ref{fig:definition}).
548
549 \begin{figure}
550 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{definition}
551 \caption{Definitions of the angles between two nitrile bonds. All
552 pairs of CN bonds in the simulation have three angles ($\theta_i$,
553 $\theta_j$ and $\omega$). $\cos\omega$ values range from -1
554 (anti-aligned) to +1 for aligned nitrile bonds.}
555 \label{fig:definition}
556 \end{figure}
557
558 In figure \ref{fig:gofromega} the effects of the field-induced phase
559 transition are clear. The nematic ordering transfers population from
560 the perpendicular or unaligned region in the center of the plot to the
561 nitrile-alinged peak near $\cos\omega = 1$. Most other features are
562 undisturbed. This increased population of aligned nitrile bonds in
563 the close solvation shells is also the population that contributes
564 most heavily to the low-frequency peaks in the vibrational spectrum.
565
566 \begin{figure}
567 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{Figure4}
568 \caption{Contours of the angle-dependent pair distribution functions
569 for nitrile bonds on 5CB in the zero-field (upper panel) and full
570 field (lower panel) simulations. Dark areas signify regions of
571 enhanced density, while light areas signify depletion relative to
572 the bulk density.}
573 \label{fig:gofromega}
574 \end{figure}
575
576
577 \section{Conclusions}
578 Field dependent changes
579
580 \section{Acknowledgements}
581 The authors thank Steven Corcelli for helpful comments and
582 suggestions. Support for this project was provided by the National
583 Science Foundation under grant CHE-0848243. Computational time was
584 provided by the Center for Research Computing (CRC) at the University
585 of Notre Dame.
586
587 \newpage
588
589 \bibliography{5CB}
590
591 \end{doublespace}
592 \end{document}