Low Density Interior in Supercooled Aqueous Nanodroplets Expels Ions to the Subsurface

23 July 2021, Version 3
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The interaction between water and ions within droplets plays a key role in the chemical reactivity of atmospheric and man-made aerosols. Here we report direct computational evidence that in supercooled aqueous nanodroplets a lower density core of tetrahedrally coordinated water expels the cosmotropic ions to the denser and more disordered subsurface. In contrast, at room temperature, depending on the nature of the ion the radial distribution in the droplet core is nearly uniform or elevated towards the center. We analyze the spatial distribution of a single ion in terms of a reference electrostatic model. The energy of the system in the analytical model is expressed as the sum of the electrostatic and surface energy of a deformable droplet. The model predicts that the ion is subject to a harmonic potential centered at the droplet's center of mass. We name this effect ``electrostatic confinement''. The model's predictions are consistent with the simulation findings for a single ion at room temperature but not at supercooling. We anticipate this study to be the starting point for investigating the structure of supercooled (electro)sprayed droplets that are used to preserve the conformations of macromolecules originating from the bulk solution.

Keywords

supercooled nanodroplets
ion-droplet interactions
mass spectrometry
aqueous clusters
ion-water interactions
hydrogen bond interactions
hydrogen bond network
atmospheric aerosols
ion-solvent interactions
Electrostatic Confinement

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
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Title
Supporting Information
Description
(S1) Derivation of the electrostatic confinement (EC) model and comparison with atomistic simulations of an ion in a droplet. (S2) Details of the computational methods and models. (S3) Water density and structure, and single \ce{Na+} radial concentration for various droplet sizes (S4) Evidence of the convergence of the simulation data, and radial probability density (concentration) profiles for \ce{I-}, \ce{Cl-}, \ce{F-}, \ce{Li+}, \ce{Cs+} in room temperature and supercooled nanodroplets. (S5) Radial distribution functions for ion-Oxygen of \ce{H2O} and ion-Hydrogen of \ce{H2O}. (S6) Radial probability density (concentration) profiles of ions in supercooled and room temperature nanodroplets using a polarizable molecular model. (S7) Multiple-ion radial concentration profiles in supercooled and room temperature nanodroplets.
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Title
Low density interior in supercooled aqueous nanodroplets expels ions to the subsurface
Description
The interaction between water and ions within droplets plays a key role in the chemical reactivity of atmospheric and man-made aerosols. Here we report direct computational evidence that in supercooled aqueous nanodroplets a lower density core of tetrahedrally coordinated water expels the cosmotropic ions to the denser and more disordered subsurface. In contrast, at room temperature, depending on the nature of the ion the radial distribution in the droplet core is nearly uniform or elevated towards the center.
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