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Understanding the interface between silicon-based materials and water: Molecular-dynamics exploration of infrared spectra
Author(s) -
José Ángel Martı́nez-González,
Niall J. English,
Aoife Gowen
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
aip advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.421
H-Index - 58
ISSN - 2158-3226
DOI - 10.1063/1.4999086
Subject(s) - silicon , infrared spectroscopy , monolayer , molecular dynamics , molecule , spectral line , adsorption , infrared , chemical physics , layer (electronics) , fourier transform infrared spectroscopy , materials science , proton , chemistry , nanotechnology , optics , computational chemistry , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , astronomy
Molecular-dynamics simulations for silicon, hydrogen- and hydroxyl-terminated silicon in contact with liquid water, at 220 and 300 K, display water-density ‘ordering’ along the laboratory z-axis, emphasising the hydrophobicity of the different systems and the position of this first adsorbed layer. Density of states (DOS) of the oxygen and proton velocity correlation functions (VACFs) and infrared (IR) spectra of the first monolayer of adsorbed water, calculated via Fourier transformation, indicate similarities to more confined, ice-like dynamical behaviour (redolent of ice). It was observed that good qualitative agreement is obtained between the DOS for this first layer in all systems. The DOS for the lower-frequency zone indicates that for the interface studied (i.e., the first layer near the surface), the water molecules try to organise in a similar form, and that this form is intermediate between liquid water and ice. For IR spectra, scrutiny of the position of the highest-intensity peaks for the stretching and bending bands indicate that such water molecules in the first solvating layer are organised in an intermediate fashion between ice and liquid water

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