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Hydrogen bonding in water under extreme confinement unveiled by nanoscale vibrational spectroscopy and simulations

Authors :
Xu, Xintong
Jin, Xin
Kuehne, Matthias
Bao, De-Liang
Martis, Joel
Tu, Yu-Ming
Ritt, Cody L.
Idrobo, Juan Carlos
Strano, Michael S.
Majumdar, Arun
Pantelides, Sokrates T.
Hachtel, Jordan A.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Fluids under extreme confinement exhibit distinctly new properties compared to their bulk analogs. Understanding the structure and intermolecular bonding of confined water lays the foundation for creating and improving applications at the water-energy nexus. However, probing confined water experimentally at the length scale of intermolecular and surface forces has remained a challenge. Here, we report a combined experiment/theory framework to reveal changes in H-bonding environment and the underlying molecular structure of confined water inside individual carbon nanotubes. H-bonding is directly probed through the O-H stretch frequency with vibrational electron energy-loss spectroscopy and compared to spectra from molecular-dynamics simulations based on density-functional-theory. Experimental spectra show that water in larger carbon nanotubes exhibit the bonded O-H vibrations of bulk water, but at smaller diameters, the frequency blueshifts to near the 'free' O-H stretch found in water vapor and hydrophobic surfaces. The matching simulations reveal that, in addition to steric confinement, the tube's vibrations play a key role in breaking up the H-bond network, resulting in an orientationally-dispersed, non-H-bonded phase. Furthermore, the temperature-dependence of the vibrations is investigated, providing insights into phase transitions and the confined-water density. This research demonstrates the potential of the experiment/theory framework to explore unprecedented aspects of structure and bonding in confined fluids.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2402.17989
Document Type :
Working Paper