The slab-confined water at the nanoscale
exhibits anomalous dielectric
properties compared to bulk water, for example, significantly low
dielectric constant. In this work, we study the dielectric properties
of nanoscale water droplets at room temperature using molecular dynamics
simulations. We find that the nanoscale water droplets feature weakly
anisotropic dielectric constant: the radial component of dielectric
constants is distinctly smaller than the tangential component although
they both decrease with reducing droplet size in a similar way. Such
dielectric behavior is closely related to the orientational preference
of water molecules near the convex surface. The molecular dipole prefers
to slightly orientate toward the interior of droplets in contrast
to the out-of-plane preference for free-standing water films and slab-confined
water, which suppresses the fluctuation of dipole moments in the radial
direction. Meanwhile, it facilitates the formation of the open hydrogen-bond
network in the surface layer and ultimately leads to the relatively
weak suppression of tangential fluctuations. The differential suppression
is responsible for the anisotropic dielectric constant of water droplets.
This anisotropic characteristic is also found in dielectric relaxation:
both the radial and the tangential relaxation are consistently slowed
down upon approaching surface but the latter is universally slower.