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Temperature and Concentration Effects on the Solvophobic Solvation of Methane in Aqueous Salt Solutions
Author(s) -
Holzmann Jörg,
Ludwig Ralf,
Geiger Alfons,
Paschek Dietmar
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
chemphyschem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.016
H-Index - 140
eISSN - 1439-7641
pISSN - 1439-4235
DOI - 10.1002/cphc.200800544
Subject(s) - solvation , chemistry , aqueous solution , methane , thermodynamics , enthalpy , solvophobic , solvation shell , molecular dynamics , supercooling , electrostriction , chemical physics , ion , computational chemistry , molecule , organic chemistry , materials science , physics , piezoelectricity , composite material
We perform molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of aqueous salt (NaCl) solutions using the TIP4P‐Ew water model (Horn et al., J. Chem. Phys. 2004 , 120 , 9665) covering broad temperature and concentration ranges extending deeply into the supercooled region. In particular we study the effect of temperature and salt concentration on the solvation of methane at infinite dilution. The salt effect on methane’s solvation free energy, solvation enthalpy and entropy, as well as their temperature dependence is found to be semi‐quantitatively in accordance with the data of Ben‐Naim and Yaacobi ( J. Phys. Chem. 1974 , 78 , 170). To distinguish the influence of local (in close proximity to ions) and global effects, we partition the salt solutions into ion influenced hydration shell regions and bulk water. The chemical potential of methane is systematically affected by the presence of salt in both sub volumes, emphasizing the importance of the global volume contraction due to electrostriction effects. This observation is correlated with systematic structural alterations similar to water under pressure. The observed electrostriction effects are found to become increasingly pronounced under cold (supercooled) conditions. We find that the influence of temperature and salt induced global density changes on the solvation properties of methane is well recovered by simple scaling relation based on predictions of the information theory model of Garde et al. ( Phys. Rev. Let. 1999 , 77 , 4966).