Web Release Date: July 4,
Molecular Mechanisms of Hydrogen-Loaded
-Hydroquinone Clathrate

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, Washington 99352, and University of Wisconsin - Parkside, Kenosha, Wisconsin 53141
Received: May 2, 2006

Abstract:
Molecular dynamics simulations are used to investigate the molecular interactions of hydrogen-loaded
-hydroquinone clathrate. It is found that, at lower temperatures, higher loadings are more stable, whereas at
higher temperatures, lower loadings are more stable. Attractive forces between the guest and host molecules
lead to a stabilized minimum-energy configuration at low temperatures. At higher temperatures, greater
displacements take the system away from the shallow energy minimum, and the trend reverses. The nature
of the cavity structure is nearly spherical for a loading of one, leads to preferential occupation near the hydroxyl
ring crowns of the cavity with a loading of two, and at higher loadings, leads to occupation of the interstitial
sites (the hydroxyl rings) between cages by a single H2 molecule with the remaining molecules occupying
the equatorial plane of the cavity. Occupation of the interstitial positions of the cavities leads to facile diffusion.
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