RESUMO
We implement molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to explore the relaxation mechanisms involved in the description of translational diffusion and rotational dynamics in water/hydrocarbon interfaces. The analysis of density profiles, self-diffusion coefficients, and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) relaxation properties as a function of the confinement layer width and type of hydrocarbons improves the understanding of confined water properties at water/oil interfaces. Density profile fluctuations reveal the presence of water-oil interactions close to the interface. MD results show that self-diffusion coefficients and NMR relaxation times of planar and cylindrical water/oil interfaces are strongly influenced by layer thickness and geometry. Shorter (between 20 and 60%) self-diffusion coefficients and 1H NMR relaxation times were obtained for water/n-pentane, water/n-decane, and water/n-hexadecane systems than bulk diffusion coefficients. An increase in Larmor frequency from 2.3 MHz to 400 MHz shows that longitudinal relaxation time (T1) of confined oil has slightly larger differences at higher frequencies than the transverse relaxation time (T2). At 400 MHz, n-alkanes (n-pentane, n-decane, and n-hexadecane) exhibit longer relaxation times than at smaller frequency values (2.3 and 22 MHz). Analysis of spin-spin and spin-lattice times provides relevant information about inter- and intramolecular relaxation mechanisms of water and oil as a function of geometry and width of the interface layer. These MD results suggest that the strength of confinement and geometry play a vital role in the diffusion and NMR relaxation properties of water/oil interfaces.
RESUMO
We report the results of Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics (BOMD) simulations on the aqueous solvation of the SmI3 molecule and of the bare Sm3+ cation at room temperature using the cluster microsolvation approach including 37 and 29 water molecules, respectively. The electronic structure calculations were done using the M062X hybrid exchange-correlation functional in conjunction with the 6-31G** basis sets for oxygen and hydrogen. For the iodine and samarium atoms, the Stuttgart-Köln relativistic effective-core potentials were utilized with their associated valence basis sets. When SmI3 is embedded in the microsolvation environment, we find that substitution of the iodine ions by water molecules around Sm(III) cannot be achieved due to an insufficient number of explicit water molecules to fully solvate the four separate metal and halogen ions. Therefore, we studied the solvation dynamics of the bare Sm3+ cation with a 29-water molecule model cluster. Through the Sm-O radial distribution function and the evolution of the Sm-O distances, the present study yields a very tightly bound first rigid Sm(III) solvation shell from 2.3 to 2.9 Å whose integration leads to a coordination number of 9 water molecules and a second softer solvation sphere from 3.9 to 5 Å with 12 water molecules. No water exchange processes were found. The theoretical EXAFS spectrum is in excellent agreement with the experimental spectrum for Sm(III) in liquid water. The strong differences between the solvation patterns of Sm(III) vs Sm(II) are discussed in detail.