The presence of counter ions in solutions containing highly charged metal cations can trigger processes such as ion-pair formation, hydrogen bond breakages and subsequent reformation, and ligand exchanges. In this work, it is shown how halide (Cl-, Br-) and perchlorate (ClO4-) anions affect the strength of the primary solvent coordination shells around Th4+ using explicit solvent and finite temperature ab initio molecular dynamics modeling methods. The 9-fold solvent geometry was found to be the most stable hydration structure in each aqueous solution. Relative to the dilute aqueous solution, the presence of the counter ions did not significantly alter the geometry of the primary hydration shell. However, the free energy analyses indicated that the 10-fold hydrated states were thermodynamically accessible in dilute and bromide aqueous solutions within 1 kcal/mol. Analysis of the results showed that the hydrogen bond lifetimes were longer and solvent exchange energy barriers were larger in solutions with counter ions in comparison with the solution with no counter ions. This implies that the presence of the counter ions induces a strengthening of the Th4+ hydration shell.
Revised: February 6, 2017 |
Published: December 29, 2016
Citation
Atta Fynn R., E.J. Bylaska, and W.A. De Jong. 2016.Strengthening of the Coordination Shell by Counter Ions in Aqueous Th4+ Solutions.Journal of Physical Chemistry A 120, no. 51:10216-10222.PNNL-SA-122830.doi:10.1021/acs.jpca.6b09878