4.7 Article

Temperature effects on the static and dynamic properties of liquid water inside nanotubes -: art. no. 021504

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW E
Volume 64, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevE.64.021504

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We report a molecular dynamics simulation study of the behavior of liquid water adsorbed in carbon nanotubes under different thermodynamic conditions. A flexible simple point charged potential has been employed to model internal and intermolecular water interactions. Water-carbon forces are modeled with a Lennard-Jones-type potential. We have studied three types of tubes with effective radii ranging from 4.1 to 6.8 A and three temperatures, from 298 to 500 K for a fixed density of 1 g/cm(3). Structure of each thermodynamic state is analyzed through the characterization of the hydrogen-bond network. Time-dependent properties such as the diffusive behavior and molecular vibrational spectra are also considered. We observe the gradual destruction of the hydrogen-bond network together with faster diffusive regimes as temperature increases. A vibrational mode absent in bulk unconstrained water appears in the power spectra obtained from hydrogen velocity autocorrelation functions for all thermodynamic states. That frequency mode should be attributed to confinement effects.

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