Abstract
Much is understood about electrolyte liquid/liquid interfaces, yet the relationships between ion solvation, adsorption, and the instantaneous surface have not been the topic of signicant study. The thermally corrugated capillary wave characteristics of the instantaneous aqueous surface contribute to heterogeneous interfacial structural and dynamic properties. Those properties are sensitive the nature of the immiscible nonpolar solvent. In this work, we examine the role of interfacial heterogeneity upon ion behavior and further, how this is inuenced by a partially polar solvent relative to a vapor phase analog. We compare and contrast ion solvation in electrolyte/vapor and electrolyte/octanol biphasic systems, focusing upon the changes to interfacial heterogeneity in the presence of the octanol solvent and the variations of ion concentration at dierent interfacial regions. The interplay between competing forces introduced by strong octanol water interactions at the interface is examined, with a new understanding of how such competition may lead to tailored interfacial properties.