posted on 2020-12-04, 13:35authored byElianna
S. Frank, Hanyu Fan, Mona Shrestha, Saleh Riahi, Douglas J. Tobias, Vicki H. Grassian
The
indoor environment is a dynamic one with many variables impacting
indoor air quality and indoor air chemistry. These include relative
humidity (RH) and the presence of different surfaces. Although it
has been suggested that the indoor concentrations of gas-phase compounds
increase at higher relative humidity, because of displacement of these
compounds from indoor surfaces, little is known from a molecular perspective
about how RH and adsorbed water impact the adsorption of indoor relevant
organic compounds such as limonene with indoor relevant surfaces.
Herein, we investigate the effects of RH on the adsorption of limonene,
a hydrophobic molecule, on hydroxylated SiO2 surfaces,
a model for glass surfaces. Experimental data using infrared spectroscopy
to directly measure limonene adsorption are combined with both force
field-based molecular dynamics (MD) and ab initio molecular dynamics
(AIMD) simulations to understand the competitive interactions between
limonene, water, and the SiO2 surface. The spectroscopic
data provide evidence that adsorbed limonene is not completely displaced
by adsorbed water, even at high RH (∼80%) when the water layer
coverage is close to three monolayers (MLs). These experimental data
are supported by AIMD and MD simulations, which indicate that limonene
is present at the adsorbed water interface but displaced from direct
interactions with SiO2. This study shows that although
some limonene can desorb from the surface, even at the highest RH,
more than half the limonene remains adsorbed on the surface that can
undergo continued surface reactivity. A complex network of π-hydrogen
bonds, water–water hydrogen bonds, and SiO2–water
hydrogen bonds explains these interactions at the air/adsorbed water/SiO2 interface that hold the hydrophobic limonene molecule at
the interface. Importantly, these interactions are most likely present
for a range of other systems involving organic compounds and solid
surfaces at ambient relative humidity and may be important in a range
of scientific areas, from sensor development to cultural heritage
science.