Article, 2024

Fast Structural Dynamics in Concentrated HCl Solutions: From Proton Hopping to the Bulk Viscosity

Journal of the American Chemical Society, ISSN 0002-7863, 1520-5126, Volume 146, 18, Pages 12355-12364, 10.1021/jacs.3c11620

Contributors

Kacenauskaite, Laura 0000-0002-2852-2893 [1] [2] Cohen, Max Moncada 0000-0003-1633-6732 [2] Van Wyck, Stephen J 0000-0001-9011-9977 [2] Fayer, Michael D (Corresponding author) [2]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen
  2. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD];
  3. [2] Stanford University
  4. [NORA names: United States; America, North; OECD]

Abstract

Concentrated acid solutions, particularly HCl, have been studied extensively to examine the proton hopping and infrared spectral signatures of hydronium ions. Much less attention has been given to the structural dynamics of concentrated HCl solutions. Here, we apply optical heterodyne detected-optical Kerr effect (OHD-OKE) measurements to examine HCl concentration-dependent dynamics from moderate (0.8 m) to very high (15.5 m) concentrations and compare the results to the dynamics of NaCl solutions, as Na+ is similar in size to the hydronium cation. Both HCl and NaCl OHD-OKE signals decay as triexponentials at all concentrations, in contrast to pure water, which decays as a biexponential. Two remarkable features of the HCl dynamics are the following: (1) the bulk viscosity is linearly related to the slowest decay constant, t3, and (2) the concentration-dependent proton hopping times, determined by ab initio MD simulations and 2D IR chemical exchange experiments, both obtained from the literature, fall on the same line as the slowest structural dynamics relaxation time, t3, within experimental error. The structural dynamics of hydronium/chloride/water clusters, with relaxation times t3, are responsible for the concentration dependence of microscopic property of proton hopping and the macroscopic bulk viscosity. The slowest time constant (t3), which does not have a counterpart in pure water, is 3 ps at 0.8 m and increases by a factor of ∼2 by 15.5 m. The two fastest HCl decay constants, t1 and t2, are similar to those of pure water and increase mildly with the concentration.

Keywords

HCl, HCl solution, Kerr effect, MD simulations, NaCl, NaCl solution, OHD-OKE signal, acid solution, attention, bulk, bulk viscosity, cations, clusters, concentrated acid solutions, concentration, concentration HCl solutions, concentration dependence, concentration-dependent dynamics, constant, counterparts, decay, decay constant, dynamics, effect, error, exchange experiments, experimental error, experiments, factors, fast structural dynamics, fasting, features, hopping, hopping time, hydronium, hydronium cation, hydronium ions, infrared spectral signatures, ions, literature, measurements, microscopic properties, properties, proton, proton hopping, proton hopping time, pure water, relaxation, relaxation time <i, results, signal, simulation, size, solution, structural dynamics, time, viscosity, water

Funders

  • Division of Chemistry
  • Directorate for Mathematical & Physical Sciences
  • The Velux Foundations

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