A comprehensive theoretical study of positron binding and annihilation properties of hydrogen bonded binary molecular clusters†
Abstract
We studied the positron binding and annihilation of hydrogen bonded binary molecular clusters containing small inorganic molecules such as water, hydrogen fluoride, ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, hydrogen chloride, and phosphine, using first-principles calculation. While unimolecular systems of these species mostly exhibit no or very small positron binding energies (positron affinities), we found that all of their hydrogen bonding clusters have greater positive positron affinities. The permanent dipole moment enhanced by the formation of the intermolecular hydrogen bond acts as a dominant parameter to bind a positron for a given proton donor, whereas it is insufficient for reproducing the dependence of the positron affinity on substitutions of the proton donor. By multiple regression analyses with inherent properties of the clusters, we found a reasonable model with additional effective parameters represented by, particularly, the number of hydrogen atoms free from the hydrogen bond. By density analyses for the single-particle and electron–positron collision probabilities, we revealed that these effective parameters are associated with the electronic structure changes induced by the hydrogen bond and positron binding, which have important roles to enhance the electron–positron contact densities due to the proton-screening effect.