Microscopic formulation of nonlocal electrostatics in polar liquids embedding polarizable ions

Sahin Buyukdagli and T. Ala-Nissila
Phys. Rev. E 87, 063201 – Published 3 June 2013

Abstract

Nonlocal electrostatic interactions associated with finite solvent size and ion polarizability are investigated within the mean-field linear response theory. To this end, we introduce a field-theoretic model of a polar liquid composed of linear multipole solvent molecules and embedding polarizable ions modeled as Drude oscillators. Unlike previous dipolar Poisson-Boltzmann formulations treating the solvent molecules as point dipoles, our model is able to qualitatively reproduce the non-local dielectric response behavior of polar liquids observed in molecular dynamics simulations and atomic force microscope experiments for water solvent at charged interfaces. The present theory explains the formation of the associated interfacial hydration layers in terms of a cooperative dipolar response mechanism driven by the reaction of the solvent molecules to their own polarization field. We also incorporate into the theory the relative multipole moments of water molecules obtained from quantum mechanical calculations and show that the multipolar contributions to the dielectric permittivity are largely dominated by the dipolar one. We find that this stems from the mutual cancellation of the first two interfacial hydration layers of opposite net charge for multipolar liquids. Within the same nonlocal dielectric response theory, we show that the induced ion polarizability reverses the interfacial ion density trends predicted by the Poisson-Boltzmann theory, resulting in a surface affinity of coions and exclusion of counterions. The results indicate that the consideration of the discrete charge composition of solvent molecules and ions is the key step towards a microscopic understanding of nonlocal electrostatic effects in polar solvents.

  • Received 17 December 2012

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.87.063201

©2013 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Sahin Buyukdagli1,* and T. Ala-Nissila1,2,†

  • 1Department of Applied Physics and COMP Center of Excellence, Aalto University School of Science, P. O. Box 11000, FI-00076 Aalto, Espoo, Finland
  • 2Department of Physics, Brown University, Providence, Box 1843, Rhode Island 02912-1843, USA

  • *sahin_buyukdagli@yahoo.fr
  • tapio.ala-nissila@aalto.fi

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Vol. 87, Iss. 6 — June 2013

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