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1.
J Phys Chem B ; 122(30): 7584-7589, 2018 08 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29991255

ABSTRACT

The ability to probe the structure of a salt solution at the atomic scale is fundamentally important for our understanding of many chemical reactions and their mechanisms. The capability of neutron diffraction to "see" hydrogen (or deuterium) and other light isotopes is exceptional for resolving the structural complexity around the dissolved solutes in aqueous electrolytes. We have made measurements using oxygen isotopes on aqueous nitrate to reveal a small hydrogen-bonded water coordination number (3.9 ± 1.2) around a nitrate oxyanion. This is compared to estimates made using the existing method of nitrogen isotope substitution and those of computational simulations (>5-6 water molecules). The low water coordination number, combined with a comparison to classical molecular dynamics simulations, suggests that ion-pair formation is significant. This insight demonstrates the utility of experimental diffraction data for benchmarking atomistic computer simulations, enabling the development of more accurate intermolecular potentials.

2.
J Phys Chem A ; 117(44): 11328-38, 2013 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24093538

ABSTRACT

Since the single-ion thermodynamic properties of bulk solutions are not directly accessible from experiments, extrapolations have been devised to estimate them from experimental measurements on small-clusters. Extrapolations based on the cluster-pair-based approximation (CPA) technique (Tissandier et al. J. Phys. Chem. A 1998, 102, 7787-7794) and its variants are currently considered one of the most reliable source of single-ion hydration thermodynamic data and have been used as a benchmark for the development of molecular and continuum solvation models. Despite its importance, the CPA has not been thoroughly tested and recent studies have indicated inconsistencies with molecular simulations. The present work challenges the key CPA assumptions that the hydration properties of single cations and anions in growing clusters rapidly converge to each other following a monotonous trend. Using a combination of simulation techniques to study the transition between alkali halide ions in small clusters and bulk solution, we show that this convergence is rather slow and involves a surprising change in trends, which can result in significant errors in the original estimated single-ion properties. When these cluster-size-dependent effects are taken into account, the inconsistencies between molecular models and experimental predictions disappear, and the value of the proton hydration enthalpy based on the CPA aligns with estimates based on other principles.


Subject(s)
Thermodynamics , Anions , Cations , Ions , Models, Chemical , Models, Molecular , Reproducibility of Results , Solutions
3.
J Chem Phys ; 128(21): 214512, 2008 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18537438

ABSTRACT

We derive second-order thermodynamically consistent truncated composition expansions for the species residual partial molar properties--including volume, enthalpy, entropy, and Gibbs free energy--of dilute ternary systems aimed at the molecular account of solvation phenomena in compressible media. Then, we provide explicit microscopic interpretation of the expansion coefficients in terms of direct and total correlation function integrals over the microstructure of the corresponding infinite dilution reference system, as well as their pressure and temperature derivatives, allowing for the direct prediction of the species partial molar properties from the knowledge of the effective intermolecular interactions. Finally, we apply these formal results (a) to derive consistent expressions for the corresponding properties of the binary system counterparts, (b) to illustrate how the formal expressions converge, at the zero density limit, to those for multicomponent mixtures of imperfect gases obeying the virial equation of state Z = 1 + BPkT, and (c) to discuss, and highlight with examples from the literature, the thermodynamic inconsistencies encountered in the currently available first-order truncated expansions, by pinpointing the mathematical origin and physical meaning of the inconsistencies that render the first-order truncated expansions invalid.

4.
J Chem Phys ; 124(15): 154509, 2006 Apr 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16674244

ABSTRACT

We perform molecular dynamics simulations to study the ionic solvation and association behavior in concentrated aqueous LiCl solutions at ambient conditions, including consideration of expected signatures of ion pairing that might be found in neutron diffraction experiments with isotopic substitution. The ten possible pair radial distribution functions that define the microstructure of the systems are determined and used to assess the first-order difference of the neutron-weighted correlation functions for these solutions in heavy and null water. Then, both sets of correlation functions are applied to the interpretation of the ion's local environment in terms of the location of the relevant peaks and the penetration of ions into the counterion solvation shells as a signature of ion-pair formation. Finally, we illustrate how first-order difference experiments involving null and heavy water might be used to assess the magnitude of the M(v+) - X(v-) ion-pair formation for a salt M(v+)X(n) v- in an aqueous solution, provided the significant experimental challenges in these studies could be overcome.

5.
J Phys Chem B ; 109(48): 23031-42, 2005 Dec 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16854001

ABSTRACT

We analyze the solvation behavior of short-chain polystyrene sulfonate (PSS) in aqueous electrolyte solutions by isothermal-isochoric molecular dynamics simulation to determine the solvation effects on the structure and conformation of the polyelectrolyte as a function of the aqueous environment. To that end, we study these aqueous systems including the explicit atomistic description of water, the PSS chain, and their interactions with all species in solution. In addition, we investigate the effect of the degree of sulfonation and its distribution along the PSS chain on the resulting conformation as well as solvation structure. Moreover, we assess the impact of added salts on the net charge of the PSS backbone, placing emphasis on the valence of the counterion and the extent of the ion-pair formation between the sulfonate group and the counterions. Finally, we present evidence for the so-called like-charge attraction between sulfonate groups through the formation of counterion-mediated interchain sulfonate-sulfonate and water-mediated intrachain sulfonate-sulfonate bridges, as well as between unlike counterion-counterion interactions.

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