Is the Electron Hydrated Through Covalent Sharing?
Y. Sajeev

TL;DR
This paper proposes that the hydrated electron is stabilized through covalent delocalization over water molecules via resonant attachment, challenging the traditional cavity model and explaining spectral features and binding energies.
Contribution
It introduces a covalent delocalization model for the hydrated electron based on ab initio calculations, emphasizing resonant interactions and transient negative ion states.
Findings
Hydrated electron stabilized by covalent delocalization over water molecules.
Resonant attachment forms transient negative ion states.
Cavity-like structures arise from covalent sharing, not electrostatic trapping.
Abstract
The hydrated electron (), a key species in radiation chemistry, is traditionally modeled as an interior electron confined within a solvent cavity and stabilized by electrostatic interactions. However, this picture fails to account for its high binding energy and discrete excited states, as the cavity lacks sufficient dipole strength to support deep electronic confinement. Using \textit{ab initio} methods that capture resonant interactions between the free electron and water, we show that the hydrated electron is stabilized through covalent delocalization. Existing approaches misrepresent this as electrostatic trapping within a cavity -- an interpretation rooted in assumptions of a pre-bound electron and the omission of the resonant character of the initial interaction between the free electron and water. Our results reveal that the electron forms transient negative ion…
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