Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.124, No.44, 9884-9897, 2020
Surface Affinity of Alkali and Halide Ions in Their Aqueous Solution: Insight from Intrinsic Density Analysis
The surface tension of all aqueous alkali halide solutions is higher than that of pure water. According to the Gibbs adsorption equation, this indicates a net depletion of these ions in the interfacial region. However, simulations and experiments show that large, soft ions, such as I-, can accumulate at the liquid/vapor interface. The presence of a loose hydration shell is usually considered to be the reason for this behavior. In this work, we perform computer simulations to characterize the liquid-vapor interface of aqueous alkali chloride and sodium halide solutions systematically, considering all ions from Li+ to Cs+ and from F- to I-. Using computational methods for the removal of surface fluctuations, we analyze the structure of the interface at a dramatically enhanced resolution, showing that the positive excess originates in the very first molecular layer and that the next 3-4 layers account for the net negative excess. With the help of a fictitious show that it is not possible to rationalize the surface affinity of ions in solutions in system with charge-inverted ion pairs, we also terms of the properties of anions and cations separately. Moreover, the surface excess is generally dominated by the smaller of the two ions.