Issue 44, 2020

From a bulk to nanoconfined water chain: bridge water at the pore of the (6,6) carbon nanotube

Abstract

Hydrophobic porous materials with nano-pores are critical in many processes such as water desalination and biological membrane transportation. Herein, we performed molecular dynamics (MD) simulations on a prototypical hydrophobic nanochannel consisting of a (6,6) carbon nanotube (CNT) of 4.12 Å in radius and 13.72 Å in length immersed in water. The simulation shows that there are two major filling numbers of water N = 5 and N = 6, with the former being the most stable one. The confined waters form a single-file water chain with two hydrogen bonds per water. An extending water chain is formed for N = 5, with a bridge water near the pore of the CNT linking the water confined inside the CNT and hydration layer around the pore of the CNT. The bridge water can be considered as intermediate water characterized by three hydrogen bonds that distinguish from the confined water and bulk water. On the other hand, the hydration layer is depleted from the pore when N = 6. The analyses of the correlation of the bond order for the adjacent hydrogen bond pair of the hydration layer around the pore of the CNT does not show apparent difference from that of bulk water, though the former is slightly ordered. van Hove analysis of the bridge water shows that it tends to move inside the CNT when N < 5, in order to maintain the chemical equilibrium between the confined water and bulk water. This study highlights the unique structure of water around the hydrophobic pore of a sub-nanometer nanochannel.

Graphical abstract: From a bulk to nanoconfined water chain: bridge water at the pore of the (6,6) carbon nanotube

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 May 2020
Accepted
19 Oct 2020
First published
22 Oct 2020

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2020,22, 25747-25759

From a bulk to nanoconfined water chain: bridge water at the pore of the (6,6) carbon nanotube

Y. Jia, X. Lu, Z. Cao and T. Yan, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2020, 22, 25747 DOI: 10.1039/D0CP02531C

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