Bound Charge Layering
Near a Spherical Ion: Moving
Beyond Born Theory
Posted on 2024-11-25 - 13:11
The response of aqueous solvent to
a dissolved ion is
analyzed
in terms of the bound charge, the net charge of the solvent in the
vicinity of the solute. The total amount of bound charge is −(1−1ϵ)Qion, where Qion is the charge of the ion
and ϵ is the solvent dielectric constant,
in both continuum and molecular theory. Aqueous solvation involves
an inner layer of bound charge way over this value, followed by another
layer that almost or over compensates the first layer, and so on.
We demonstrate how layering of charge explains the strong solvation
response of aqueous solvent. Born theory, in which the ion resides
in a cavity within a dielectric continuum, places all the bound charge
on the cavity surface. Without accounting for bound charge layering,
it cannot describe the strong aqueous solvation response. The only
adjustable parameter in Born theory is the cavity radius, and unphysically
small values of the radius are required to match the Born prediction
to the actual solvation free energy. We propose a simple analytical
model for aqueous solvation of a spherical ion that incorporates bound
charge layering. We point out which parameters are expected to be
solvent-specific and transferable between different solutes, while
other parameters should depend upon ion and solvent size. The solvation
energy from finite, periodically replicated simulations must be corrected
to describe an ion at infinitely dilution. We present a very simple
correction, and demonstrate its accuracy.
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Lee, Min-Sang; Singer, Sherwin J. (2024). Bound Charge Layering
Near a Spherical Ion: Moving
Beyond Born Theory. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.4c05727