July 17, 2014
Journal Article

Water Exchange Rates and Molecular Mechanism around Aqueous Halide Ions

Abstract

Molecular dynamics simulations were performed to systematically study the water-exchange mechanism around aqueous chloride, bromide, and iodide ions. Transition state theory, Grote-Hynes theory, and the reactive flux method were employed to compute water exchange rates. We computed the pressure dependence of rate constants and the corresponding activation volumes to investigate the mechanism of the solvent exchange event. The activation volumes obtained using the transition state theory rate constants are negative for all the three anions, thus indicating an associative mechanism. Contrary to the transition state theory results, activation volumes obtained using rate constants from Grote-Hynes theory and the reactive flux method are positive, thus indicating a dissociative mechanism. The Division of Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences, Office of Basic Energy Sciences (BES), of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) funded this work. Battelle operates Pacific Northwest National Laboratory for DOE. The calculations were carried out using computer resources provided by BES.

Revised: February 24, 2015 | Published: July 17, 2014

Citation

Annapureddy H.V., and L.X. Dang. 2014. Water Exchange Rates and Molecular Mechanism around Aqueous Halide Ions. Journal of Physical Chemistry B 118, no. 28:7886-7891. PNNL-SA-100320. doi:10.1021/jp500402j