Beyond the Electric Dipole Approximation: Electric and Magnetic Multipole Contributions Reveal Biaxial Water Structure from SFG Spectra at the Air-Water Interface
Louis Lehmann, Maximilian R. Becker, Lucas Tepper, Alexander P. Fellows, \'Alvaro D\'iaz Duque, Martin Th\"amer, Roland R. Netz

TL;DR
This paper introduces a simulation framework that accurately predicts higher-order multipole contributions in SFG spectra, enabling detailed analysis of water's interfacial structure and biaxial ordering.
Contribution
The authors develop a comprehensive simulation approach to quantify all multipole contributions in SFG spectra, advancing the interpretation of interfacial molecular arrangements.
Findings
Higher-order multipole contributions are essential for accurate SFG spectral interpretation.
Electric quadrupole contributions dominate the OH-stretch shoulder at 3600/cm.
Subtracting quadrupole and magnetic contributions isolates electric dipole susceptibility, revealing water's biaxial order.
Abstract
The interpretation of sum-frequency-generation (SFG) spectra has been severely limited by the absence of quantitative theoretical predictions of higher-order multipole contributions. Magnetic dipole and electric quadrupole contributions are determined by bulk properties but appear in all experimental SFG spectra, obscuring the connection between measured spectra and interfacial structure. We present the simulation-based framework to predict the full set of multipole spectral contributions. This framework also yields depth-resolved spectra, enabling the precise spatial localization of spectroscopic features. Applied to the air-water interface, our approach achieves quantitative agreement with experimental spectra for different polarization combinations in both the bending and stretching regions. Higher-order multipole contributions are crucial for correctly interpreting SFG spectra: in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeophysical and Geoelectrical Methods · NMR spectroscopy and applications · Magnetic and Electromagnetic Effects
