Pauline G. Simonnin, Sebastien N. Kerisit, Timothy C. Johnson, Kevin M. Rosso
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Structure and Dynamics of Water and Ions at Quartz (101) and (001) Surfaces under Applied Electric Fields from Molecular Simulations
Electrical double layer (EDL) models are commonly adopted as a framework for understanding electrokinetic properties at mineral-fluid interfaces but the dynamics of ion and water mobilities are typically not well known. Extending the previous work performed at equilibrium conditions, here it is examined how applied electric fields induce mobilities of monovalent and divalent ions at hydroxylated quartz (001) and (101) interfaces with various electrolyte solutions (NaCl, KCl, and CaCl2). The simulations reveal how the diffusion coefficients depend on the orientation and magnitude of the applied electric field, with a particularly strong effect for fields applied parallel to the quartz surfaces. While the effect in perpendicular applied fields is more subtle, nonetheless the disruption of the water in the first layers at the surface with corresponding effects on wettability is observed. The details of EDL ion drift mobilities are found to be strongly correlated to the silanol density and crystallographic orientation at the interface. The findings shed light on the complex interplay between local and external forces affecting how these interfaces respond in applied field applications that include electrical impedance spectroscopy, electroosmotic flow, and ζ -potential measurements.
期刊介绍:
ChemPhysChem is one of the leading chemistry/physics interdisciplinary journals (ISI Impact Factor 2018: 3.077) for physical chemistry and chemical physics. It is published on behalf of Chemistry Europe, an association of 16 European chemical societies.
ChemPhysChem is an international source for important primary and critical secondary information across the whole field of physical chemistry and chemical physics. It integrates this wide and flourishing field ranging from Solid State and Soft-Matter Research, Electro- and Photochemistry, Femtochemistry and Nanotechnology, Complex Systems, Single-Molecule Research, Clusters and Colloids, Catalysis and Surface Science, Biophysics and Physical Biochemistry, Atmospheric and Environmental Chemistry, and many more topics. ChemPhysChem is peer-reviewed.