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Publication

Water Adsorption on Mica Surfaces with Hydrophilicity Tuned by Counterion Type (Na, K, Cs) and Structural Fluorination

Authors

Koishi, Ayumi; Lee, Sang Soo; Fenter, Paul; Fernandez-Martinez, Alejandro; Bourg, Ian

Abstract

The stability of adsorbed water films on mineral surfaces has far-reaching implications in the Earth, environmental, and materials sciences. Here, we use the basal plane of phlogopite mica, an atomically smooth surface of a natural mineral, to investigate water film structure and stability as a function of two features that modulate surface hydrophilicity: the type of adsorbed counterion (Na, K, Cs) and the substitution of structural OH groups by F atoms. We use molecular dynamics (MD) simulations combined with in situ high-resolution X-ray reflectivity to examine surface hydration over a range of water loadings, from the adsorption of isolated water molecules to the formation of clusters and films. We identify four regimes characterized by distinct adsorption energetics and different sensitivities to cation type and mineral fluorination: from 0 to monolayer film thickness, the hydration of adsorbed ions; from to 1 monolayer, the hydration of uncharged regions of the siloxane surface; from 1 to 1 monolayer, the attachment of isolated water molecules on the surface of the first mono-layer; and for > 1 monolayer, the formation of an incipient electrical double layer at the mineral-water interface.