Adsorptive Structure and Mobility on Carbon Nanotube Exteriors Using Benzoic Acid as a Molecular Probe of Amphiphilic Water Contaminants.
Iskinder ArsanoSaikat TalapatraXingmao MaMesfin TsigePublished in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2022)
Benzoic acid is the simplest aromatic carboxylic acid that is also a common water contaminant. Its structural and amphiphilic properties are shared by many other contaminants of concern. Based on a molecular dynamics study, this work reports the competitive adsorption of benzoic acid with water on the curved exteriors of carbon nanotubes of varying oxygen content. With the help of cylindrically approximated pair correlation functions, carboxyl-carboxyl associations were found to serve as an additional mechanism providing stability to the adsorbed benzoic acid on tube exteriors. These associations are secondary to the main aromatic-aromatic interactions during the adsorption process and therefore were not sufficient to establish the energy hierarchy at the adsorbed state with increase in surface oxygen content. The same mechanism was previously ascribed to the adsorption of the structurally similar but bulkier tannic acid. Both water and benzoic acid were organized into numerous mobility groups and a correspondence was established between species residence time and the average translation time taken to escape the tube vicinity. Vigorous exchange of water molecules among the first adsorption shell, the second adsorption shell, and the immediate vicinity radially outside was estimated to take place within a short time of about 10 ps.