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Water in extremely narrow planar pores with crystalline walls. 1. Structure
Authors:S. V. Shevkunov
Affiliation:1. St. Petersburg State Polytechnical University, ul. Politekhnicheskaya 29, St. Petersburg, 195251, Russia
Abstract:Computer simulation has been employed to study the structure of water condensate filling planar pores 1.25 and 0.62 nm wide located parallel to the basal face in a silver iodide crystal at 260 K. All stages of adsorption of single molecules up to complete pore filling have been described. At an initial stage, strong clustering of molecules is observed on the walls; then, the walls are covered with a monomolecular film; and, at the final stage, molecules are adhered to the surface of the film, thus filling the internal space of the pore. First, adsorption occurs at the wall containing positive ions on the surface and, then, on the opposite wall with negative ions. On both walls, adsorbed molecules are adhered to the surface via the interaction with ions of the second crystallographic layer; given this, two types, α and β, of molecule plane orientation are realized on opposite walls. The adhesion of an adsorbed molecular film to molecules filling the interior of the pore requires the partial transition of film molecules from the α- to the β-type orientation on one wall and the inverse transition on the other wall. The deficiency of α-oriented molecules on one wall and β-oriented ones on the other is the main reason for poor wettability of the surface of the monomolecular films adsorbed on the walls. In an extremely narrow pore, molecules are simultaneously captured in the field of both walls. The forces acting from the sides of both walls result in the separation of a film into spots having structures matched to the crystalline structure of each wall, with the film being on the verge of breakage.
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