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    IONS AND THE STRUCTURE AND DYNAMICS OF INTERFACIAL WATER AT CHARGED SURFACES

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    Genre
    Thesis/Dissertation
    Date
    2015
    Author
    Dewan, Shalaka
    Advisor
    Borguet, Eric
    Committee member
    Klein, Michael Leslie
    Levis, Robert J.
    Lester, Marsha I.
    Department
    Chemistry
    Subject
    Chemistry
    Chemistry, Physical
    Interfacial Chemistry
    Nonlinear Optics
    Salt Effect
    Sum-frequency Generation Spectroscopy
    Vibrational Dynamics
    Water
    Permanent link to this record
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/2778
    
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    DOI
    http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/2760
    Abstract
    The distinct structure and dynamics of interfacial water are due to a break in the extended hydrogen bonding network present in bulk water. At solid-aqueous interfaces, the presence of surface charge, which induces a static electric field, and the electrolytes, which are present in most naturally relevant systems, can additionally perturb the hydrogen bonding environment due to polarization. The interplay between the surface-charge-induced electric field and the ions in changing the structure of interfacial water has important consequences in the chemistry of processes ranging from protein-water interactions to mineral-water reactivity in oil recovery. Accessing information about the first few layers of water at buried interfaces is challenging. Vibrational sum-frequency generation (vSFG) spectroscopy is a powerful technique to study exclusively the interfacial region and is used here to investigate the role of interfacial solvent structure on surface reactivity. It is known that the rate of quartz dissolution increases on addition of salt at neat water pH. The reason for this enhancement was hypothesized to be a consequence of perturbations in interfacial water structure. The vSFG spectra, which is a measure of ordering in the interfacial water structure, shows an enhanced effect of salt (NaCl) at neat pH 6~8. The trend in the effect of salt on vSFG spectra versus the bulk pH is remarkably consistent with the enhancement of rate of quartz dissolution, providing the first experimental correlation between interfacial water structure and silica dissolution. If salt alters the structure of interfacial water, it must affect the vibrational energy transfer pathways of water, which is extremely fast in bulk water (~130 fs). Thus far, the role of ions on the vibrational dynamics of water at charged surfaces has been limited to the screening effects and reduction in the depth of the region that contributes to vSFG. Here, we measure the ultrafast vibrational relaxation of the O-H stretch of water at silica at different bulk pH, using time-resolved (TR-vSFG). The fast vibrational dynamics of water (~200 fs) observed at charged silica surfaces (pH 6 and pH 12), slows down (~600 fs) on addition of NaCl only at pH 6 and not at pH 12. On the other hand at pH 2 (neutral surface), the vibrational relaxation shows an acceleration at high ionic strengths (0.5 M NaCl). The TR-vSFG results suggest that there is a surface-charge dependence on the sensitivity of the interfacial dynamics to ions and that reduction in the probe depth of vSFG alone cannot explain the changes in the vibrational lifetime of interfacial O-H. This is further supported by the cation specific effects observed in the TR-vSFG of the silica/water interface. While the vibrational relaxation of O-H stretch slows on addition of all salts (LiCl, NaCl, RbCl, and CsCl), the degree of slowing down is sensitive to the cation identity. The vibrational lifetime of O-H stretch in the presence of different cations follows the order: Li+ < Na+ < Rb+, consistent with previous Hofmeister effect reported in vSFG spectroscopy as well as AFM measurements at silica/water interface. To provide molecular insight on the effect of surface charge density and ionic strength on the changes in interfacial water structure, Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations were performed on water at different types of surfaces. It was shown that the properties of water near the interface, e.g., a net orientation and the depth to which this persists, depend on the degree of specific adsorption of the counter ions. Our vSFG results, along with the insights from MD simulations, highlight the importance of considering the role of ions on the solvent structure within the electric double layer region, beyond the screening effects predicted by classical electrochemical models.
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