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Observation of a Two-Dimensional Hydrophobic Collapse at the Surface of Water Using Heterodyne-Detected Surface Sum-Frequency Generation.

Sanghamitra SenguptaJan VersluisHuib J Bakker
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2023)
We study the effect of sodium chloride (NaCl) on the properties of the interface of water and the surfactant dodecyl sulfate (DS - ) using heterodyne-detected vibrational sum-frequency generation spectroscopy. We find that the signal of the O-H stretch vibrations of oriented water molecules at the interface is highly nonlinearly dependent on the NaCl concentration. This nonlinear dependence is explained by a combination of screening of the electric field of surface-bound DS - ions pointing into the bulk and screening of the Coulomb repulsion between the headgroups of the DS - ions in the surface plane. The latter effect strongly increases the oriented water signal within a limited NaCl concentration range of 10-100 mM, indicating a two-dimensional hydrophobic collapse of the surfactant layer. The occurrence of collapse is supported by model calculations of the surface potential and surface surfactant density.
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