Unified Molecular Picture of the Surfaces of Aqueous Acid, Base, and Salt Solutions
Top Cited Papers
- 23 March 2005
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in The Journal of Physical Chemistry B
- Vol. 109 (16) , 7617-7623
- https://doi.org/10.1021/jp0445730
Abstract
The molecular structure of the interfacial regions of aqueous electrolytes is poorly understood, despite its crucial importance in many biological, technological, and atmospheric processes. A long-term controversy pertains between the standard picture of an ion-free surface layer and the strongly ion specific behavior indicating in many cases significant propensities of simple inorganic ions for the interface. Here, we present a unified and consistent view of the structure of the air/solution interface of aqueous electrolytes containing monovalent inorganic ions. Molecular dynamics calculations show that in salt solutions and bases the positively charged ions, such as alkali cations, are repelled from the interface, whereas the anions, such as halides or hydroxide, exhibit a varying surface propensity, correlated primarily with the ion polarizability and size. The behavior of acids is different due to a significant propensity of hydronium cations for the air/solution interface. Therefore, both cations and anions exhibit enhanced concentrations at the surface and, consequently, these acids (unlike bases and salts) reduce the surface tension of water. The results of the simulations are supported by surface selective nonlinear vibrational spectroscopy, which reveals among other things that the hydronium cations are present at the air/solution interface. The ion specific propensities for the air/solution interface have important implications for a whole range of heterogeneous physical and chemical processes, including atmospheric chemistry of aerosols, corrosion processes, and bubble coalescence.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evidence for an Enhanced Hydronium Concentration at the Liquid Water SurfaceThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2005
- Propensity of soft ions for the air/water interfaceCurrent Opinion in Colloid & Interface Science, 2004
- Infrared Signature of Structures Associated with the H + (H 2 O)
n
( n = 6 to 27) ClustersScience, 2004
- Quantitative Theory of Surface Tension and Surface Potential of Aqueous Solutions of ElectrolytesThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2002
- Surface Tension of Electrolytes: Specific Ion Effects Explained by Dispersion ForcesLangmuir, 2001
- Surface segregation of bromine in bromide doped NaCl: Implications for the seasonal variations in Arctic ozoneGeophysical Research Letters, 2000
- Sum Frequency Generation of O−H Vibrations on the Surface of H2O/HNO3Solutions and Liquid HNO3The Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 1999
- Effect of H2SO4 and Alkali Metal SO42-/HSO4- Salt Solutions on Surface Water Molecules Using Sum Frequency GenerationThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 1999
- Reactive Uptake of Cl2(g) and Br2(g) by Aqueous Surfaces as a Function of Br- and I- Ion Concentration: The Effect of Chemical Reaction at the InterfaceThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1995
- The Surface Tension of Debye-Hückel ElectrolytesThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1934