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Salting-in/Salting-out Mechanism of Carbon Dioxide in Aqueous Electrolyte Solutions
Authors:Xia Zhang  Lu Zhang  Tan Jin  Zhi-jun Pan  Zhe-ning Chen  Qiang Zhang  Wei Zhuang
Institution:1.Department of Chemistry, Bohai University, Jinzhou 121013, China2.State Key Laboratory of Structural Chemistry, Fujian Institute of Research on the Structure of Matter, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Fuzhou 350002, China
Abstract:The solvation of carbon dioxide in sea water plays an important role in the carbon circle and the world climate. The salting-out/salting-in mechanism of CO2 in electrolyte solutions still remains elusive at molecule level. The ability of ion salting-out/salting-in CO2 in electrolyte solution follows Hofmeister Series and the change of water mobility induced by salts can be predicted by the viscosity B-coefficients. In this work, the chemical potential of carbon dioxide and the dynamic properties of water in aqueous NaCl, KF and NaClO4 solutions are calculated and analyzed. According to the viscosity B-coefficients, NaClO4 (0.012) should salt out the carbon dioxide relative to in pure water, but the opposite effect is observed for it. Our simulation results suggest that the salting-in effect of NaClO4 is due to the strongly direct anion-CO2 interaction. The inconsistency between Hofmeister Series and the viscosity B-coefficient suggests that it is not always right to indicate whether a salt belongs to salting-in or salting-out just from these properties of the salt solution in the absence of solute.
Keywords:Salting effect  Viscosity B-coefficient  Hofmeister Series  Water dynamics
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