Surface charges at the CaF2/water interface allow very fast intermolecular vibrational-energy transfer
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Abstract
We investigate the dynamics of water in contact with solid calcium fluoride, where at low pH, localized charges can develop upon fluorite dissolution. We use 2D surface-specific vibrational spectroscopy to quantify the heterogeneity of the interfacial water (D2O) molecules and provide information about the sub-picosecond vibrational-energy-relaxation dynamics at the buried solid/liquid interface. We find that strongly H-bonded OD groups, with a vibrational frequency below 2500 cm−1, display very rapid spectral diffusion and vibrational relaxation; for weakly H-bonded OD groups, above 2500 cm−1, the dynamics slows down substantially. Atomistic simulations based on electronic-structure theory reveal the molecular origin of energy transport through the local H-bond network. We conclude that strongly oriented H-bonded water molecules in the adsorbed layer, whose orientation is pinned by the localized charge defects, can exchange vibrational energy very rapidly due to the strong collective dipole, compensating for a partially missing solvation shell.
