The individual elementary reactions involved in the dissolution of a solid into solution remain mostly speculative due to a lack of suitable, direct experimental probes. In this regard, we have applied atomistic simulations to map the free energy landscape of the dissolution of gibbsite from a step edge, as a model of metal hydroxide dissolution. The overall reaction combines kink site formation and kink site propagation. Two individual reactions were found to be rate-limiting for kink site formation, that is, the displacement of Al from a step site to a ledge adatom site and its detachment from ledge/terrace adatom sites into the solution. As a result, a pool of mobile and labile Al adsorbed species, or adatoms, exists before the release of Al into solution. Because of the quasi-hexagonal symmetry of gibbsite, kink site propagation can occur in multiple directions. Overall, the simulation results will enable the development of microscopic mechanistic models of metal oxide dissolution.
Revised: November 2, 2018 |
Published: April 5, 2018
Citation
Shen Z., S.N. Kerisit, A.G. Stack, and K.M. Rosso. 2018.Free-Energy Landscape of the Dissolution of Gibbsite at High pH.The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 9, no. 7:1809-1814.PNNL-SA-132350.doi:10.1021/acs.jpclett.8b00484