Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.110, No.7, 2378-2386, 2006
Experimental and computational study of small (n=1-16) stoichiometric zinc and cadmium chalcogenide clusters
Zinc selenide, cadmium sulfide, and cadmium selenide clusters were produced by direct laser ablation and analyzed in a time-of-flight mass spectrometer. The positive-ion mass spectra indicated that clusters composed of six and thirteen monomer units were ultrastable in all cases. The geometries and energies of the neutral and positively charged M,X, clusters up to n = 16 were obtained computationally at the B3LYP level of theory using the SKBJ basis set for the metal atoms and the SKBJ(d,2df) basis set for the chalcogen atoms. Small neutral and positive clusters (n = 1-4) have planar geometries, neutral three-dimensional clusters have the geometry of closed-cage polyhedra, and cationic three-dimensional clusters have structures with a pair of two-coordinated atoms. Physical properties of the clusters as a function of size are reported. The relative stability of the positive stoichiometric clusters provides a thermodynamic explanation for the relative stability observed experimentally from the laser-ablation mass spectrometry.