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Bridging molecular-scale interfacial science with continuum-scale models.

Anastasia G IlgenEric BorguetFranz M GeigerJulianne M GibbsVicki H GrassianYoung-Shin JunNadine J KabengiJames D Kubicki
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
Solid-water interfaces are crucial for clean water, conventional and renewable energy, and effective nuclear waste management. However, reflecting the complexity of reactive interfaces in continuum-scale models is a challenge, leading to oversimplified representations that often fail to predict real-world behavior. This is because these models use fixed parameters derived by averaging across a wide physicochemical range observed at the molecular scale. Recent studies have revealed the stochastic nature of molecular-level surface sites that define a variety of reaction mechanisms, rates, and products even across a single surface. To bridge the molecular knowledge and predictive continuum-scale models, we propose to represent surface properties with probability distributions rather than with discrete constant values derived by averaging across a heterogeneous surface. This conceptual shift in continuum-scale modeling requires exponentially rising computational power. By incorporating our molecular-scale understanding of solid-water interfaces into continuum-scale models we can pave the way for next generation critical technologies and novel environmental solutions.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • public health
  • risk assessment
  • heavy metals
  • municipal solid waste
  • life cycle