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Enhanced Heat Flow between Charged Nanoparticles and an Aqueous Electrolyte.

Reza RabaniMohammad Hassan SaidiAli RajabpourLaurent JolySamy Merabia
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2023)
Heat transfer through the interface between a metallic nanoparticle and an electrolyte solution has great importance in a number of applications, ranging from nanoparticle-based cancer treatments to nanofluids and solar energy conversion devices. However, the impact of the surface charge and dissolved ions on heat transfer has been scarcely explored so far. In this study, we compute the interface thermal conductance between hydrophilic and hydrophobic charged gold nanoparticles immersed in an electrolyte using equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations. Compared with an uncharged nanoparticle, we report a 3-fold increase of the Kapitza conductance for a nanoparticle surface charge of +320 mC/m 2 . This enhancement is shown to be approximately independent of the surface wettability, charge spatial distribution, and salt concentration. This allows us to express the Kapitza conductance enhancement in terms of the surface charge density on a master curve. Finally, we interpret the increase of the Kapitza conductance as a combined result of the shift of the water density distribution toward the charged nanoparticle and an accumulation of the counterions around the nanoparticle surface which increase the Coulombic interaction between the liquid and the charged nanoparticle. These considerations help us to apprehend the role of ions in heat transfer close to electrified surfaces.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • ionic liquid
  • iron oxide
  • gold nanoparticles
  • heat stress
  • escherichia coli
  • aqueous solution
  • liquid chromatography
  • squamous cell