4.6 Article

A Molecular Dynamic Study of the Effects of Surface Partitioning on the OH Radical Interactions with Solutes in Multicomponent Aqueous Aerosols

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JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
卷 127, 期 3, 页码 751-764

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AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.2c07419751

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The study employed molecular dynamics to investigate the distribution of saccharide and amide molecules between the surface and bulk of aqueous droplets. The simulations revealed that molecules with only polar functional groups tend to stay in the water bulk, while molecules with an alkyl group migrate towards the interface. Surface-active solutes near the water surface adopt a preferred orientation with the alkyl group facing the surface. The different packing arrangements in the interface influence solvation shell structures and the interaction between the organic molecules and absorbed OH radicals.
The surface-bulk partitioning of small saccharide and amide molecules in aqueous droplets was investigated using molecular dynamics. The air-particle interface was modeled using a 80 & ANGS; cubic water box containing a series of organic molecules and surrounded by gaseous OH radicals. The properties of the organic solutes within the interface and the water bulk were examined at a molecular level using density profiles and radial pair distribution functions. Molecules containing only polar functional groups such as urea and glucose are found predominantly in the water bulk, forming an exclusion layer near the water surface. Substitution of a single polar group by an alkyl group in sugars and amides leads to the migration of the molecule toward the interface. Within the first 2 nm from the water surface, surface-active solutes lose their rotational freedom and adopt a preferred orientation with the alkyl group pointing toward the surface. The different packing within the interface leads to different solvation shell structures and enhanced interaction between the organic molecules and absorbed OH radicals. The simulations provide quantitative information about the dimension, composition, and organization of the air-water interface as well as about the nonreactive interaction of the OH radicals with the organic solutes. It suggests that increased concentrations, preferred orientations, and decreased solvation near the air-water surface may lead to differences in reactivities between surface-active and surface-inactive molecules. The results are important to explain how heterogeneous oxidation mechanisms and kinetics within interfaces may differ from those of the bulk.

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