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Thermodynamics of hydronium and hydroxide surface solvation

Authors :
Carl Caleman
Jochen S. Hub
David van der Spoel
Gerrit Groenhof
Maarten G. Wolf
Paul J. van Maaren
Source :
Chemical Science, Chemical science 5(5), 1745-1749 (2014). doi:10.1039/c3sc52862f
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

[Introduction] The concentration of hydronium and hydroxide at the water-air interface has been under debate for a long time. Recent evidence from a range of experiments and theoretical calculations strongly suggests the water surface is somewhat acidic. Using novel polarizable models we have performed potential of mean force calculations of a hydronium ion, a hydroxide ion and a water molecule in a water droplet and a water slab and we were able to rationalize that hydronium, but not hydroxide, is slightly enriched at the surface for two reasons. First, because the hydrogen-bond acceptance capacity of hydronium is weaker than water it is more favorable to have the hydronium oxygen on the surface. Second, hydroxide ions are expelled from the surface of droplets, due to the entropy being lower when a hydroxide ion is hydrated on the surface. As a result, the water dissociation constant pK w increases slightly near the surface. The results are corroborated by calculations of surface tension of NaOH solutions that are in reasonable agreement with experiment. The structural and thermodynamic interpretation of hydronium and hydroxide hydration provided by these calculations opens the route to a better understanding of atmospheric- and surface chemistry. peerReviewed

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chemical Science, Chemical science 5(5), 1745-1749 (2014). doi:10.1039/c3sc52862f
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8810dab07411e547f4e2c1a985ec5748
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/c3sc52862f