4.8 Article

Surface chemical heterogeneity modulates silica surface hydration

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1722263115

关键词

water; silica; hydration dynamics; surface forces; hydrophobicity

资金

  1. NSF MRSEC Program [DMR 1720256]
  2. NSF [CHE1505038, DMR-1312548]
  3. Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE 1144085]
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1505038, 1312548] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  5. Division Of Chemistry [1505038] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  6. Division Of Materials Research [1312548] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

An in-depth knowledge of the interaction of water with amorphous silica is critical to fundamental studies of interfacial hydration water, as well as to industrial processes such as catalysis, nanofabrication, and chromatography. Silica has a tunable surface comprising hydrophilic silanol groups and moderately hydrophobic siloxane groups that can be interchanged through thermal and chemical treatments. Despite extensive studies of silica surfaces, the influence of surface hydrophilicity and chemical topology on the molecular properties of interfacial water is not well understood. In this work, we controllably altered the surface silanol density, and measured surface water diffusivity using Overhauser dynamic nuclear polarization (ODNP) and complementary silica-silica interaction forces acrosswater using a surface forces apparatus (SFA). The results show that increased silanol density generally leads to slower water diffusivity and stronger silicasilica repulsion at short aqueous separations (less than similar to 4 nm). Both techniques show sharp changes in hydration properties at intermediate silanol densities (2.0-2.9 nm(-2)). Molecular dynamics simulations of model silica-water interfaces corroborate the increase in water diffusivity with silanol density, and furthermore show that even on a smooth and crystalline surface at a fixed silanol density, adjusting the spatial distribution of silanols results in a range of surface water diffusivities spanning similar to 10%. We speculate that a critical silanol cluster size or connectivity parameter could explain the sharp transition in our results, and can modulate wettability, colloidal interactions, and surface reactions, and thus is a phenomenon worth further investigation on silica and chemically heterogeneous surfaces.

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