Issue 2, 2012

Solvation of Au+versusAu0 in aqueous solution: electronic structure governs solvation shell patterns

Abstract

The solvation behavior of Au+ and Au0 in liquid water under ambient conditions has been studied using ab initio molecular dynamics. The Au+ aqua ion forms a rigid and well-defined quasi-linear structure in the sense of ligand field theory, where two water molecules are tightly bound to the gold cation through oxygen atoms (“cationic solvation”). Yet, transient charge accumulation in the direction perpendicular to the O–Au+–O linear core structure leads occasionally to the formation of a short Au+–H contact within the distance range of the first solvation shell, which is typical of “anionic solvation”. Upon adding an electron to Au+, the resulting solvation pattern of Au0(aq) has nothing in common with that of Au+(aq). Quite surprisingly we discover that the first solvation shell of Au0(aq) consists of a single water molecule and features both “anionic” and “cationic” solvation patterns depending on fluctuation and polarization effects. Thus, charging/decharging of metals dissolved in water, M0 ↔ M+ + e, as occurring e.g. during elementary electrochemical steps, is expected to change dramatically their solvation behavior in the sense of re-solvation processes.

Graphical abstract: Solvation of Au+versusAu0 in aqueous solution: electronic structure governs solvation shell patterns

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
16 Sep 2011
Accepted
07 Nov 2011
First published
24 Nov 2011

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2012,14, 937-944

Solvation of Au+versusAu0 in aqueous solution: electronic structure governs solvation shell patterns

M. F. Camellone and D. Marx, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2012, 14, 937 DOI: 10.1039/C1CP22961C

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