posted on 2021-04-14, 18:34authored bySimone Pezzotti, Alessandra Serva, Federico Sebastiani, Flavio Siro Brigiano, Daria Ruth Galimberti, Louis Potier, Serena Alfarano, Gerhard Schwaab, Martina Havenith, Marie-Pierre Gaigeot
Hydrophobicity/hydrophilicity
of aqueous interfaces at the molecular
level results from a subtle balance in the water–water and
water–surface interactions. This is characterized here via
density functional theory–molecular dynamics (DFT-MD) coupled
with vibrational sum frequency generation (SFG) and THz-IR absorption
spectroscopies. We show that water at the interface with a series
of weakly interacting materials is organized into a two-dimensional
hydrogen-bonded network (2D-HB-network), which is also found above
some macroscopically hydrophilic silica and alumina surfaces. These
results are rationalized through a descriptor that measures the number
of “vertical” and “horizontal” hydrogen
bonds formed by interfacial water, quantifying the competition between
water–surface and water–water interactions. The 2D-HB-network
is directly revealed by THz-IR absorption spectroscopy, while the
competition of water–water and water–surface interactions
is quantified from SFG markers. The combination of SFG and THz-IR
spectroscopies is thus found to be a compelling tool to characterize
the finest details of molecular hydrophobicity at aqueous interfaces.