June 16, 2009
Journal Article

Origin of two time-scale regimes in potentiometric titration of metal oxides. A replica kinetic Monte Carlo study

Abstract

Replica Kinetic Monte Carlo simulations were used to study the characteristic time scales of potentiometric titration of the metal oxides and (oxy)hydroxides. The effect of surface heterogeneity and surface transformation on the titration kinetics were also examined. Two characteristic relaxation times are often observed experimentally, with the trailing slower part attributed to surface non-uniformity, porosity, polymerization, amorphization, and other dynamic surface processes induced by unbalanced surface charge. However, our simulations show that these two characteristic relaxation times are intrinsic to the proton binding reaction for energetically homogeneous surfaces, and therefore surface heterogeneity or transformation do not necessarily need to be invoked. However, all such second-order surface processes are found to intensify the separation and distinction of the two kinetic regimes. The effect of surface energetic-topographic non-uniformity, as well dynamic surface transformation, interface roughening/smoothing were described in a statistical fashion. Furthermore, our simulations show that a shift in the point-of-zero charge is expected from increased titration speed and the pH-dependence of the titration measurement error is in excellent agreement with experimental studies.

Revised: June 23, 2010 | Published: June 16, 2009

Citation

Zarzycki P.P., and K.M. Rosso. 2009. Origin of two time-scale regimes in potentiometric titration of metal oxides. A replica kinetic Monte Carlo study. Langmuir 25, no. 12:6841-6848. PNNL-SA-64058.