Taylor & Francis Group
Browse
gmos_a_961017_sm1926.doc (1021.5 kB)

Counterions and water molecules in charged silicon nanochannels: the influence of surface charge discreteness

Download (0 kB)
Version 2 2015-07-03, 13:20
Version 1 2015-07-03, 13:20
journal contribution
posted on 2015-07-03, 13:20 authored by Yinghua Qiu, Yunfei Chen

In order to detect the effect of the surface charge discreteness on the properties at the solid–liquid interface, a molecular dynamics simulation model considering the vibration of wall atoms was used to investigate the performance of ion and water under different charge distributions. Through the comparison between simulation results and the theoretical prediction, it was found that, with the increasing degree of discreteness, much more counterions were attracted to the surface. These ions formed a denser accumulating layer which was located much nearer to the surface and caused charge inversion. The ions in this layer were non-hydrated or partially hydrated. When a voltage was applied across the nanochannel, this dense accumulating layer did not move unlike the ions near the uniformly charged surface. From the water density profiles obtained in nanochannels with different surface charge distributions, the influence of the surface charge discreteness on water distributions could be neglected.

History