Formation and interaction of hydrated alkali metal ions at the graphite-water interface
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2006

Ion hydration at a solid surface ubiquitously exists in nature and plays important roles in many natural processes and technological applications. Aiming at obtaining a microscopic insight into the formation of such systems and interactions therein, we have investigated the hydration of alkali metal ions at a prototype surface-graphite (0001), using first-principles molecular dynamics simulations. At low water coverage, the alkali metal ions form two-dimensional hydration shells accommodating at most four (Li, Na) and three (K, Rb, Cs) waters in the first shell. These two-dimensional shells generally evolve into three-dimensional structures at higher water coverage, due to the competition between hydration and ion-surface interactions. Exceptionally K was found to reside at the graphite-water interface for water coverages up to bulk water limit, where it forms an "umbrellalike" surface hydration shell with an average water-ion-surface angle of 115 degrees. Interactions between the hydrated K and Na ions at the interface have also been studied. Water molecules seem to mediate an effective ion-ion interaction, which favors the aggregation of Na ions but prevents nucleation of K. These results agree with experimental observations in electron energy loss spectroscopy, desorption spectroscopy, and work function measurement. In addition, the sensitive dependence of charge transfer on dynamical structure evolution during the hydration process, implies the necessity to describe surface ion hydration from electronic structure calculations.

ADSORPTION

SURFACES

GENERALIZED GRADIENT APPROXIMATION

LIQUID WATER

AQUEOUS-SOLUTIONS

H2O

DENSITY-FUNCTIONAL THEORY

POTASSIUM

COADSORPTION

MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS

Författare

Sheng Meng

Chalmers, Teknisk fysik, Material- och ytteori

Shiwu Gao

Göteborgs universitet

Journal of Chemical Physics

0021-9606 (ISSN) 1089-7690 (eISSN)

Vol. 125 (1) 014708- 014708

Ämneskategorier

Annan fysik

Den kondenserade materiens fysik

DOI

10.1063/1.2206591

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Senast uppdaterat

2022-04-05