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Journal ArticleDOI

Coupled jump rotational dynamics in aqueous nitrate solutions

TLDR
A detailed atomic-level investigation of hydrogen Bond rearrangement dynamics of water in aqueous KNO3 solution is performed to unearth two distinct mechanisms of hydrogen bond exchange that are instrumental to promote these jump motions of nitrate ions.
Abstract
A nitrate ion (NO3-) with its trigonal planar geometry and charges distributed among nitrogen and oxygen atoms can couple to the extensive hydrogen bond network of water to give rise to unique dynamical characteristics. We carry out detailed atomistic simulations and theoretical analyses to investigate these aspects and report certain interesting findings. We find that the nitrate ions in aqueous potassium nitrate solution exhibit large amplitude rotational jump motions that are coupled to the hydrogen bond rearrangement dynamics of the surrounding water molecules. The jump motion of nitrate ions bears certain similarities to the Laage-Hynes mechanism of rotational jump motions of tagged water molecules in neat liquid water. We perform a detailed atomic-level investigation of hydrogen bond rearrangement dynamics of water in aqueous KNO3 solution to unearth two distinct mechanisms of hydrogen bond exchange that are instrumental to promote these jump motions of nitrate ions. As observed in an earlier study by Xie et al., in the first mechanism, after breaking a hydrogen bond with nitrate ion, water forms a new hydrogen bond with a water molecule, whereas the second mechanism involves just a switching of hydrogen bond between the two oxygen atoms of the same nitrate ion (W. J. Xie et al., J. Chem. Phys. 143, 224504 (2015)). The magnitude as well as nature of the reorientational jump of nitrate ion for the two mechanisms is different. In the first mechanism, nitrate ion predominantly undergoes out-of-plane rotation, while in the second mechanism, in-plane reorientation of NO3- is favourable. These have been deduced by computing the torque on the nitrate ion during the hydrogen bond switching event. We have defined and computed the time correlation function for coupled reorientational jump of nitrate and water and obtained the associated relaxation time which is also different for the two mechanisms. These results provide insight into the relation between the coupled reorientational jump dynamics of solute and solvent molecules. Published by AIP Publishing.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rotation driven translational diffusion of polyatomic ions in water: A novel mechanism for breakdown of Stokes-Einstein relation.

TL;DR: It is shown that unlike the acetate ion, nitrate ion with a symmetric charge distribution among all periphery oxygen atoms shows a faster rotational motion with large amplitude rotational jumps which enhances its translational motion due to translational-rotational coupling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ions' motion in water.

TL;DR: An overview of how rotational diffusion and translational diffusion of polyatomic ions themselves are coupled to translational and rotational motions of water molecules and how a mode-coupling theory approach can capture many aspects of this coupling between the solute ion and solvent water.
Journal ArticleDOI

A First-Principles Molecular Dynamics Study of the Solvation Shell Structure, Vibrational Spectra, Polarity, and Dynamics around a Nitrate Ion in Aqueous Solution

TL;DR: A first-principles molecular dynamics study is presented for the structural, dynamical, vibrational, and dipolar properties of the solvation shell of a nitrate ion in deuterated water and the dynamics of rotation and hydrogen bond relaxation are found to be faster in the hydration shell than that in the bulk water.
Journal ArticleDOI

Preferential solvation, ion pairing, and dynamics of concentrated aqueous solutions of divalent metal nitrate salts

TL;DR: The current results show that the water molecules are incorporated into fairly well-structured hydration shells of the ions, thus decreasing the single-particle diffusivities and increasing the orientational relaxation times of water with an increase in salt concentration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microscopic structural features of water in aqueous–reline mixtures of varying compositions

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of the gradual addition of co-solvents on the microscopic arrangements of water molecules was investigated in four aqueous solutions of reline, between 26.3 and 91.4 wt%.
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