TY - JOUR
T1 - Water Structure in the Electrical Double Layer and the Contributions to the Total Interfacial Potential at Different Surface Charge Densities
AU - Rehl, Benjamin
AU - Ma, Emily
AU - Parshotam, Shyam
AU - Dewalt-Kerian, Emma L.
AU - Liu, Tianli
AU - Geiger, Franz M.
AU - Gibbs, Julianne M.
N1 - Funding Information:
J.M.G. gratefully acknowledges the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada for an Accelerator Award, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation for a Research Fellowship, and Petro-Canada for a Young Innovator Award. B.R. gratefully acknowledges support from the Alberta/Technical University of Munich International Graduate School for Hybrid Functional Materials (ATUMS-NSERC CREATE) program, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada for a Canadian Graduate Scholarship, and the Queen Elizabeth II Graduate Scholarship. F.M.G. and E.M. gratefully acknowledge support from the AFOSR Molecular Dynamics and Theoretical Chemistry Program and from Northwestern University. We thank Dr. Dennis K. Hore (University of Victoria), Dr. Christopher Mundy (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory), and Dr. Eric Tyrode (KTH Royal Institute of Technology) for insightful discussions.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/9/14
Y1 - 2022/9/14
N2 - The electric double layer governs the processes of all charged surfaces in aqueous solutions; however, elucidating the structure of the water molecules is challenging for even the most advanced spectroscopic techniques. Here, we present the individual Stern layer and diffuse layer OH stretching spectra at the silica/water interface in the presence of NaCl over a wide pH range using a combination of vibrational sum frequency generation spectroscopy, heterodyned second harmonic generation, and streaming potential measurements. We find that the Stern layer water molecules and diffuse layer water molecules respond differently to pH changes: unlike the diffuse layer, whose water molecules remain net-oriented in one direction, water molecules in the Stern layer flip their net orientation as the solution pH is reduced from basic to acidic. We obtain an experimental estimate of the non-Gouy-Chapman (Stern) potential contribution to the total potential drop across the insulator/electrolyte interface and discuss it in the context of dipolar, quadrupolar, and higher order potential contributions that vary with the observed changes in the net orientation of water in the Stern layer. Our findings show that a purely Gouy-Chapman (Stern) view is insufficient to accurately describe the electrical double layer of aqueous interfaces.
AB - The electric double layer governs the processes of all charged surfaces in aqueous solutions; however, elucidating the structure of the water molecules is challenging for even the most advanced spectroscopic techniques. Here, we present the individual Stern layer and diffuse layer OH stretching spectra at the silica/water interface in the presence of NaCl over a wide pH range using a combination of vibrational sum frequency generation spectroscopy, heterodyned second harmonic generation, and streaming potential measurements. We find that the Stern layer water molecules and diffuse layer water molecules respond differently to pH changes: unlike the diffuse layer, whose water molecules remain net-oriented in one direction, water molecules in the Stern layer flip their net orientation as the solution pH is reduced from basic to acidic. We obtain an experimental estimate of the non-Gouy-Chapman (Stern) potential contribution to the total potential drop across the insulator/electrolyte interface and discuss it in the context of dipolar, quadrupolar, and higher order potential contributions that vary with the observed changes in the net orientation of water in the Stern layer. Our findings show that a purely Gouy-Chapman (Stern) view is insufficient to accurately describe the electrical double layer of aqueous interfaces.
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U2 - 10.1021/jacs.2c01830
DO - 10.1021/jacs.2c01830
M3 - Article
C2 - 36042195
AN - SCOPUS:85137866261
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 144
SP - 16338
EP - 16349
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 36
ER -