4.7 Article

The good, the bad, and the hidden in neutron scattering and molecular dynamics of ionic aqueous solutions

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 156, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0093643

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sports of the Czech Republic [LTAUSA17163]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences Division
  3. Scientific User Facilitates Division, BES, DOE

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This study characterizes a concentrated CaCl2 solution and investigates ion pairing using neutron diffraction, chloride isotopic substitution, and molecular dynamics simulations. The dominant type of ion pairing is found to be solvent-shared, while contact ion pairing is insignificant even at high concentrations. Results also show that existing molecular dynamics models accurately reproduce most of the experimental data, but they tend to overestimate the extent of ion pairing.
We characterize a concentrated 7.3 m CaCl2 solution, combining neutron diffraction with chloride isotopic substitution (Cl-NDIS) in null water and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. We elucidate the solution structure, thermodynamic properties, and extent of ion pairing previously suggested as concentration-dependent and often not observed at lower concentrations. Our Cl-NDIS measurements designate the solvent-shared ion pairing as dominant and the contact ion pairing (CIP) as insignificant even under conditions close to the solubility limit. The MD models parameterized against neutron diffraction with calcium isotopic substitution (Ca-NDIS) overestimate CIP despite successfully reproducing most of the Cl-NDIS signal. This drawback originates from the fact that Ca2+-Cl- interactions were primarily hidden in the Ca-NDIS signal due to overlapping with Ca2+-O-w and Ca2+-H-w contributions to the total scattering. Contrary, MD models with moderate CIP and possessing generally good performance at high concentrations fail to reproduce the NDIS measurements accurately. Therefore, the electronic polarization, introduced in most of the recent MD models via scaling ionic charges, resolves some but not all parameterization drawbacks. We conclude that despite improving the quality of MD models on average, the question which model is the best has not been answered but replaced by the question which model is better for a given research. An overall good model can still be inappropriate or, in some instances, bad and, unfortunately, produce erroneous results. The accurate interpretation of several NDIS datasets, complemented by MD simulations, can prevent such mistakes and help identify the strengths, weaknesses, and convenient applications for corresponding computational models. Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing.

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