4.6 Review

Investigations of water/oxide interfaces by molecular dynamics simulations

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/wcms.1537

Keywords

ion adsorption; molecular dynamics simulation; pKa; sum frequency generation; water; oxide interface

Funding

  1. Center for Complex Materials from First Principles (CCM) - U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0012575]
  2. National Science Foundation [MRI 1828421, IOS-1934848]
  3. National Institutes of Health [R01GM093290, R01GM131048, S10OD020095]
  4. Temple University

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Water/oxide interfaces play a significant role in many chemical processes and have been the focus of research utilizing advanced experimental techniques and computational simulations. The understanding of these interfaces is crucial for developing better fuel cells and solar cells to address the energy crisis. Despite the limitations in knowledge, progress has been made in classical and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations of water/oxide interfaces.
Water/oxide interfaces are ubiquitous on earth and show significant influence on many chemical processes. For example, understanding water and solute adsorption as well as catalytic water splitting can help build better fuel cells and solar cells to overcome our looming energy crisis; the interaction between biomolecules and water/oxide interfaces is one hypothesis to explain the origin of life. However, knowledge in this area is still limited due to the difficulty of studying water/solid interfaces. As a result, research using increasingly sophisticated experimental techniques and computational simulations has been carried out in recent years. Although it is difficult for experimental techniques to provide detailed microscopic structural information, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have satisfactory performance. In this review, we discuss classical and ab initio MD simulations of water/oxide interfaces. Generally, we are interested in the following questions: How do solid surfaces perturb interfacial water structure? How do interfacial water molecules and adsorbed solutes affect solid surfaces and how do interfacial environments affect solvent and solute behavior? Finally, we discuss progress in the application of neural network potential based MD simulations, which offer a promising future because this approach has already enabled ab initio level accuracy for very large systems and long trajectories. This article is categorized under: Theoretical and Physical Chemistry > Spectroscopy Molecular and Statistical Mechanics > Molecular Interactions Structure and Mechanism > Molecular Structures

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