4.7 Article

Grotthuss Molecular Dynamics Simulations for Modeling Proton Hopping in Electrosprayed Water Droplets

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 18, Issue 6, Pages 3781-3794

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.2c00001

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineer-ing Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2018-04243]

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The authors have developed a molecular dynamics (MD) simulation technique to model the behavior of excess protons in water solutions. By combining atomistic MD simulations with proton hopping, they were able to capture the Grotthuss diffusion mechanism. The technique was applied to study highly charged water droplets and showed consistent behavior with experimental data.
Excess protons in water exhibit unique transport properties because they can rapidly hop along H-bonded water wires. Considerable progress has been made in unraveling this Grotthuss diffusion mechanism using quantum mechanical-based computational techniques. Unfortunately, high computational cost tends to restrict those techniques to small systems and short times. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations can be applied to much larger systems and longer time windows. However, standard MD methods do not permit the dissociation/formation of covalent bonds, such that Grotthuss diffusion cannot be captured. Here, we bridge this gap by combining atomistic MD simulations (using Gromacs and TIP4P/2005 water) with proton hopping. Excess protons are modeled as hydronium ions that undergo H3O+ + H2O -> H2O + H3O+ transitions. In accordance with ab initio MD data, these Grotthuss hopping events are executed in bursts with quasi-instantaneous hopping across one or more waters. The bursts are separated by regular MD periods during which H3O+ ions undergo Brownian diffusion. The resulting proton diffusion coefficient agrees with the literature value. We apply this Grotthuss MD technique to highly charged water droplets that are in a size regime encountered during electrospray ionization (5 nm radius, similar to 17,000 H2O). The droplets undergo rapid solvent evaporation and occasional H3O+ ejection, keeping them at ca. 81% of the Rayleigh limit. The simulated behavior is consistent with phase Doppler anemometry data. The Grotthuss MD technique developed here should be useful for modeling the behavior of various proton-containing systems that are too large for high-level computational approaches. In particular, we envision future applications related to electrospray processes, where earlier simulations used metal cations while in reality excess protons dominate.

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