info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Role of confinement and surface affinity on filling mechanisms and sorption hysteresis of water in nanopores
Fecha
2012-01Registro en:
de la Llave, Ezequiel Pablo; Molinero, Valeria; Scherlis Perel, Damian Ariel; Role of confinement and surface affinity on filling mechanisms and sorption hysteresis of water in nanopores; American Chemical Society; Journal of Physical Chemistry C; 116; 2; 1-2012; 1833-1840
1932-7447
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
de la Llave, Ezequiel Pablo
Molinero, Valeria
Scherlis Perel, Damian Ariel
Resumen
The liquid-vapor transition in cylindrical pores is studied as a function of pore size and hydrophilicity through molecular dynamics simulations with the mW coarse-grained model of water. We identify two distinct filling mechanisms, depending on whether the water-pore interaction is smaller or larger than the water-water interaction. In the former case (that we term hydrophobic pore), the formation of the condensed phase proceeds gradually with filling, through the nucleation of a water cluster which grows toward the center of the cavity. In hydrophilic pores, instead, the condensed phase develops in conditions of supersaturation, which in principle become more extreme with increasing pore radius and surface affinity. For highly hydrophilic interfaces (those with adsorption energy for water above 10 kcal/mol), the equilibrium and dynamical properties of water in confinement turn out to be practically independent of water affinity.