scholarly journals Correlation Length in Concentrated Electrolytes: Insights from All-Atom Molecular Dynamics Simulations

Author(s):  
Samuel Coles ◽  
Chanbum Park ◽  
Rohit Nikam ◽  
Matej Kanduč ◽  
Joachim Dzubiella ◽  
...  

<div><p>We study the correlations length of the charge-charge pair correlations in concentrated electrolyte solutions by means of all-atom, explicit-solvent molecular dynamics simulations. We investigate LiCl and NaI in water, which constitute highly soluble, prototypical salts for experiments, as well as two more complex, molecular electrolyte systems of lithium bis(trifluoromethane)sulfonimide (LiTFSI), commonly employed in electrochemical storage systems, in water and in an organic solvent mixture of dimethoxyethane (DME) and dioxolane (DOL). Our simulations support the recent experimental observations as well as theoretical predictions of a non-monotonic behavior of the correlation length with increasing salt concentration. We observe a Debye-Hückel like regime at low concentration, followed by a minimum reached when <i>d/λ<sub>D</sub></i> = 1, where <i>λ<sub>D</sub></i> is the Debye correlation length and d the effective ionic diameter, and an increasing correlation length with salt concentration in very concentrated electrolytes. As in the experiments, we find that the screening length in the concentrated regime follows a universal scaling law as a function <i>d/λ<sub>D</sub></i> for all studied salts. However, the scaling exponent is significantly lower than the experimentally measured one, and lies in the range of the theoretical predictions based on much simpler electrolyte models.</p> </div>

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Coles ◽  
Chanbum Park ◽  
Rohit Nikam ◽  
Matej Kanduč ◽  
Joachim Dzubiella ◽  
...  

<div><p>We study the correlations length of the charge-charge pair correlations in concentrated electrolyte solutions by means of all-atom, explicit-solvent molecular dynamics simulations. We investigate LiCl and NaI in water, which constitute highly soluble, prototypical salts for experiments, as well as two more complex, molecular electrolyte systems of lithium bis(trifluoromethane)sulfonimide (LiTFSI), commonly employed in electrochemical storage systems, in water and in an organic solvent mixture of dimethoxyethane (DME) and dioxolane (DOL). Our simulations support the recent experimental observations as well as theoretical predictions of a non-monotonic behavior of the correlation length with increasing salt concentration. We observe a Debye-Hückel like regime at low concentration, followed by a minimum reached when <i>d/λ<sub>D</sub></i> = 1, where <i>λ<sub>D</sub></i> is the Debye correlation length and d the effective ionic diameter, and an increasing correlation length with salt concentration in very concentrated electrolytes. As in the experiments, we find that the screening length in the concentrated regime follows a universal scaling law as a function <i>d/λ<sub>D</sub></i> for all studied salts. However, the scaling exponent is significantly lower than the experimentally measured one, and lies in the range of the theoretical predictions based on much simpler electrolyte models.</p> </div>


Cellulose ◽  
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eivind Bering ◽  
Jonathan Ø. Torstensen ◽  
Anders Lervik ◽  
Astrid S. de Wijn

Abstract We investigate the dissolution mechanism of cellulose using molecular dynamics simulations in both water and a mixture solvent consisting of water with Na$$^+$$ + , OH$$^-$$ - and urea. As a first computational study of its kind, we apply periodic external forces that mimic agitation of the suspension. Without the agitation, the bundles do not dissolve, neither in water nor solvent. In the solvent mixture the bundle swells with significant amounts of urea entering the bundle, as well as more water than in the bundles subjected to pure water. We also find that the mixture solution stabilizes cellulose sheets, while in water these immediately collapse into bundles. Under agitation the bundles dissolve more easily in the solvent mixture than in water, where sheets of cellulose remain that are bound together through hydrophobic interactions. Our findings highlight the importance of urea in the solvent, as well as the hydrophobic interactions, and are consistent with experimental results. Graphical abstract


2021 ◽  
Vol 249 ◽  
pp. 04001
Author(s):  
Satoshi Takada

The temperature evolution of dilute soft inertial gas-solid suspensions is theoretically analyzed when the gas particles are influenced by a nonlinear drag force from a background fluid. The kinetic theory is extended to this system, and the time evolutions of the temperature and the kurtosis of the velocity distribution are derived. Molecular dynamics simulations are also performed to check the validity of the theory, and they show good agreement with the theoretical predictions.


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