Working Paper: Cosolvents Disrupt Water H-bond Networks at Electrode Interfaces: a Surface-enhanced 2D IR Study
收藏Texas Data Repository2025-09-30 更新2026-04-16 收录
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https://dataverse.tdl.org/citation?persistentId=doi:10.18738/T8/D6YMNU
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资源简介:
In electrochemical reactions, interfacial water restructuring can drive electrocatalytic activity. Characterizing interfacial water’s H-bond network structure and dynamics is one of the first steps towards obtaining a mechanistic understanding of electrochemical processes in aqueous environments. Here we use surface-enhanced two-dimensional infrared (SE 2D IR) spectroscopy to quantify the effect of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) on water dynamics by measuring the picosecond frequency fluctuation of nitrile-based vibrational probes at a functionalized gold electrode. Pure water, biexponential dynamics show a fast component of ~1.0 ps corresponding to local spectral diffusion and a slower component of 9.9 ps attributed to H-bond exchange. DMSO considerably accelerates interfacial H-bond rearrangements. For example, at 20 mol% DMSO the slow component shortens to 1.8 ps, indicating a more labile H-bond networks. In stark contrast, DMSO slows dynamics in the bulk, consistent with long-lived water–DMSO microdomains. The interface vs bulk comparison shows that DMSO disrupts cooperative H-bonding of water by inducing disorder at the metal-liquid interface, speeding up H-bond rearrangements. Whereas in 3D bulk environment, long-lived microheterogeneity exhibits slower dynamics. The study demonstrates how cosolvents can be used to modulate interfacial water dynamics but also highlights the complexities of predicting solvent behavior at electrochemical interfaces
提供机构:
University of Texas at Austin
创建时间:
2025-09-12



