The hydrogen bond and the water molecule-
The hydrogen bond and the water molecule:
the physics and chemistry of water, aqueous and bio media
Acknowledgments
Preface
Part I: The hydrogen bond
Chapter 1 The hydrogen bond: formation, thermodynamic properties, classification
Chemical bonds
Intermolecular bonds
Van der Waals interactions,
Hydrogen bonds
The H-bond: historical and prospective aspects, general bibliography
Intermolecular and intramolecular H-bonds
Electronic structures of H-bonds
Thermodynamics of H-bonds: electronic and vibrational contributions to enthalpies
Examples of weak, intermediate strength and strong H-bonds
Weak H-bonds
Medium-strength H-bonds
Strong H-bonds
Non-conventional H-bonds
H/D substitutions in H-bonds
Appendix A: energies and related quantities.
Chapter 2 Geometrical properties of H-bonds and H-bonded organized supramolecular structures
Geometries of H-bonds at equilibrium
Equilibrium angles (0 and (0
Equilibrium distances Q0
Equilibrium distances q0
Organized supramolecular structures of macromolecules
Cellulose and amylose
Proteins
Composition: polypeptide backbone
Primary, secondary and tertiary structures of a protein
Pleated (-sheets
(-helices
tertiary structures and beyond
Stability of secondary structures and denaturation of proteins
DNA
Conclusion
Chapter 3 Methods to observe and describe H-bonds
Calorimetry
Modern experimental methods
Absorption of an electromagnetic wave
Microwave spectroscopy
IR spectra: rotational bonds
NMR spectroscopy
Principles
NMR of H-bonds established by small or medium-size molecules
NMR of macromolecules
Conclusion
X-ray absorption spectroscopy
Scattering of electromagnetic waves or particles
Coherent scattering (X-rays and neutrons)
Incoherent scattering
Incoherent light scattering
Incoherent neutron scattering (INS)
Theoretical descriptions of the electronic structures of H-bonds
Summary
Chapter 4 Infrared spectroscopy of H-bonded systems: experimental point of view
IR spectroscopy and H-bond vibrations
Intermonomer vibrations in the FIR region
Description
anharmonicities of intermonomer modes.
Intramonomer vibrations in the mid-infrared region
Stretching bands (s
Introduction
Integrated intensities
(s band centres
Shifts [pic]of (s and enthalpies (H of H-bonds
Shifts [pic]of (s and H-bond distances
Evidence of cooperativity between H-bonds
Conclusion
Widths of (s bands
The (s band of H-bonds: conclusion.
Other intramonomer bands
Stretching and bending vibrations of the donating X-H group
Carbonyl and carboxyl C=O groups
Multiphoton vibrational spectroscopy: Raman and nonlinear IR spectroscopies
Raman spectra
Time resolved non linear IR spectroscopies
Sum-frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy
Conclusion
Chapter 5 Infrared spectroscopy of H-bonded systems: theoretical descriptions
Introduction
Integrated intensities of (s bands
(s bandshapes of isolated H-bonds: modulation by intermonomer modes
Modulation by intermonomer stretching modes
Modulation by intermonomer bending modes
(s bandshapes of non-isolated H-bonds
(s bandshapes of H-bonds: Fermi resonances
conclusion on (s bands
Appendix: IR spectroscopy
Experimental spectroscopy: measured quantities and set-ups
First moments of a distribution or of a spectral band
Normal modes in the harmonic approximation
Reduced masses, force constants and vibrational amplitudes
Centre and width of νs
Chapter 6 Reactivity of H-bonds: transfers of protons and of H-atoms
Great amplitude motions in isolated H-bonds
Proton transfers in a H-bond network
Ionization mechanism of an acid or a base
Diffusion of H3O+ and OH- ions in liquid water
Proton transfers in the electronic excited state
Photoacids
ESPT's in biology: photosynthesis and vision mechanisms.
H-bonded ferroelectrics
Hydrogen atom transfers by tautomerism
Conclusion
Chapter 7 H/D isotopic substitution in H-bonds
The H and D atoms: similarities and differences
Geometries and therrmodynamics of H-bonds and D-bonds
Geometries of H-bonds and D-bonds
Enthalpies of H-bonds and D-bonds
Dynamic properties of H-bonds and D-bonds
Vibrational spectra of H-bonds and D-bonds
Partial H/D substitution and isotopic dilution
H/D substitution in biology: a dramatic effect on reactivity
H-bonds and D-bonds as seen by methods sensitive to nuclear spins
Conclusion
Appendix
Part II: The water molecule
Chapter 8 The H2O molecule in water vapour and ice
H2O : an exceptional molecule.
Water vapour
The major greenhouse gas and its strong IR bands
Formation of rain drops.
Ice(s)
Ice Ih and Ice Ic
Crystal structures
IR spectrum
Structures of ice surfaces.
Other crystalline phases of ice.
Ice Ih/ liquid water interfaces.
Amorphous phases of ice.
Reactivity of ice
Ice in the atmosphere
Ozone depletion and polar stratospheric clouds
Mechanisms of ozone destruction.
Conclusion
Chapter 9 The H2O molecule in liquid water
H-bonds in liquid water
Thermodynamics
IR spectroscopy
O-H free groups?
IR spectra of liquid water and of ice
intermonomer bands
intramonomer bands
Structure of the H-bond network of liquid water.
The exceptional properties of liquid water
Exceptional chemical properties
Ionization and solvation of acids and bases
Ionization and solvation of salts
Solvation of organic molecules
Organized structures of amphiphile molecules
Micelles
Biological membranes
Langmuir-Blodgett layers
Exceptional physical properties
Our understanding of liquid water
Conclusion
Chapter 10 The water molecule in (bio)macromolecules
Water molecules and their dense hydrogen bond networks
Arrangements of water molecules in macromolecules
Hydration mechanisms
Hydration of a model biopolymer: hyaluronane (HA)
Dried state of HA
Successive hydration mechanisms
First hydration mechanism H1
Subsequent hydration mechanisms at higher hygrometries
Hydration of a synthetic polymer: a sulfonated polyimide
General features for hydration mechanisms?
Protection of biomacromolecules against external stress (cryo- and lyo-protections)
Survival under freezing temperatures or hydric stress
Protection mechanisms
Protein folding
Reactivity of water molecules in macromolecules
Conclusion
Chapter 11 Observing the water molecule
A difficult to observe molecule
Global methods
Classical molecular methods other than vibrational spectroscopy
X-ray scattering
Neutron scattering
NMR spectroscopy
Molecular Dynamics (MD)
Vibrational spectroscopy
IR spectroscopy to observe H2O molecules
ATR (Attenuated Total Reflection)
IR spectrometry on thin samples: hydration of macromolecules
Hydration spectra of hyaluronane HA
Analysis of hydration spectra
Bands due to H2O molecules: measurement of the water uptake
Intensities of the difference bands due to the macromolecule
Time-resolved non-linear IR spectroscopy
NIR and Raman spectroscopies
Conclusion
Part III: General conclusion
Chapter 12 Conclusion: the H-bond, the water molecule and life
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