| Literature DB >> 27118164 |
Piotr Zarzycki1, Benjamin Gilbert2.
Abstract
Water diffusion within smectite clay interlayers is reduced by confinement and hence is highly determined by the interlayer spacings that are adopted during swelling. However, a molecular understanding of the short- and long-range forces governing interlayer water structure and dynamics is lacking. Using molecular dynamics simulations of water intercalated between pyrophyllite (smectite prototype) layers we provide a detailed picture of the variation of interlayered water mobility accompanying smectite expansion. Subtle changes in hydrogen bond network structure cause significant changes in water mobility that is greater for stable hydration states and reduced for intermediate separations. By studying pyrophyllite with and without external water we reveal that long-range electrostatic forces apply a restraining effect upon interlayer water mobility. Our findings are relevant for broad range of confining nanostructures with walls thin enough to permit long-range interactions that could affect the mobility of confined solvent molecules and solute species.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27118164 PMCID: PMC4846866 DOI: 10.1038/srep25278
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) The structure of pyrophyllite clays (charge neutral analog of smectites). Two tetrahedral sheets of silica sandwich an octahedral sheet of alumina. (b,c) The simulation cells. We used two types of simulation models to understand the propagation of structural and dynamic correlations across the clay plates: with water present only between the clay plates (b) and with water also outside the plates interlayer (c).
Figure 2Variation in the interlayer water diffusion coefficient with uncharged smectite (i.e., pyrophyllite) layer separation for two simulation models (b): water inside the pyrophyllite layers and vacuum outside (black) and water both between and outside of the layers (red). The brown shaded boxes in panel b identify the stable hydration states (1W, 2W, 3W as visualized in (a)) or the intermediate states (1–2W, 2–3W, 3–4W). The corresponding oxygen density profiles in (c) are indicated by arrows. Panel d shows the calculated water-water hydrogen bonding profiles for key separations (i.e., 1W, 1–2W, 2W, etc).
Figure 3Water oxygen density profiles for the model with water only between plates (black) and also with water present outside the plates (red) for a varying clay-plates spacing.
The interlayer profiles are almost indistinguishable.