4.6 Review Book Chapter

Water Interfaces, Solvation, and Spectroscopy

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY, VOL 64
Volume 64, Issue -, Pages 317-337

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-physchem-040412-110153

Keywords

liquid water; interfaces; ion solvation; isosbestic behavior; vibrational spectroscopy

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Liquid water consistently expands our appreciation of the rich statistical mechanics that can emerge from simple molecular constituents. Here I review several interrelated areas of recent work on aqueous systems that aim to explore and explain this richness by revealing molecular arrangements, their thermodynamic origins, and the timescales on which they change. Vibrational spectroscopy of OH stretching features prominently in these discussions, with an emphasis on efforts to establish connections between spectroscopic signals and statistics of intermolecular structure. For bulk solutions, the results of these efforts largely verify and enrich existing physical pictures of hydrogen-bond network connectivity, dynamics, and response. For water at interfaces, such pictures are still emerging. As an important example I discuss the solvation of small ions at the air-water interface, whose surface propensities challenge a basic understanding of how aqueous fluctuations accommodate solutes in heterogeneous environments.

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