Volume 160, 2013

Adsorption of solutes at liquid–vapor interfaces: insights from lattice gas models

Abstract

The adsorption behavior of ions at liquid–vapor interfaces exhibits several unexpected yet generic features. In particular, energy and entropy are both minimum when the solute resides near the surface, for a variety of ions in a range of polar solvents, contrary to predictions of classical theories. Motivated by this generality, and by the simple physical ingredients implicated by computational studies, we have examined interfacial solvation in highly schematic models, which resolve only coarse fluctuations in solvent density and cohesive energy. Here we show that even such lattice gas models recapitulate surprising thermodynamic trends observed in detailed simulations and experiments. Attention is focused on the case of two dimensions, for which approximate energy and entropy profiles can be calculated analytically. Simulations and theoretical analysis of the lattice gas highlight the role of capillary wave-like fluctuations in mediating adsorption. They further point to ranges of temperature and solute–solvent interaction strength where surface propensity is expected to be strongest.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 May 2012
Accepted
28 May 2012
First published
17 Oct 2012

Faraday Discuss., 2013,160, 63-74

Adsorption of solutes at liquid–vapor interfaces: insights from lattice gas models

S. Vaikuntanathan, P. R. Shaffer and P. L. Geissler, Faraday Discuss., 2013, 160, 63 DOI: 10.1039/C2FD20106B

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