19–23 Feb 2018
Schloss Ringberg am Tegernsee
Europe/Berlin timezone

What we do and don’t know about water at interfaces – Molecular Level Insight from Computer Simulation

21 Feb 2018, 09:50
50m
Schloss Ringberg am Tegernsee

Schloss Ringberg am Tegernsee

Speaker

Angelos Michaelides (London Centre for Nanotechnology, UK)

Description

There are few molecules, if any, more important than water. Yet remarkably little is known about how it interacts with solid surfaces, particularly at the all important atomic-level. This is true despite widespread general interest and compelling environmental and economic incentives. For example, water-solid interactions play a crucial role in the activity of fuel cells, the chemistry of the atmosphere, global warming, corrosion, catalysis, the operation of membranes, and so on. In this talk I will discuss some of our recent work in which we have been using classical and quantum molecular dynamics approaches as well as advanced electronic structure methods to better understand the structural and dynamical properties of water-solid interfaces. This will include work focused on understanding the formation of ice [1-3], confined water in nanocapiliaries [4], and water diffusion and friction [5-7].

References
[1] M. Fitzner, G. C. Sosso, S. J. Cox and A. Michaelides, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 137, 13658 (2015).
[2] G. Sosso et al., J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 7, 2350 (2015).
[3] A. Kiselev et al, Science (2016); DOI: 10.1126/science.aai8034.
[4] J. Chen, G. Schusteritsch, C. J. Pickard, C. G. Salzmann and A. Michaelides, Phys. Rev. Lett. 116, 025501 (2016).
[5] G. Tocci, L. Joly and A. Michaelides, Nano Lett. 14, 6872 (2014).
[6] M. Ma, G. Tocci, A. Michaelides and G. Aeppli, Nature Materials 15, 66 (2016).
[7] L. Joly, G. Tocci, S. Merabia, and A. Michaelides, J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 7, 1381 (2016).

Primary author

Angelos Michaelides (London Centre for Nanotechnology, UK)

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