Web Release Date: November 18,
The Many Origins of Charge Inversion in Electrolyte Solutions: Effects of Discrete Interfacial Charges
and
Departament de Fisica, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra, Spain, and Department of Physics and Astronomy and Ames Laboratory, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011
Received: September 1, 2006
In Final Form: October 9, 2006
Abstract:
We show that charge inversion, i.e., interfacial charges attracting counterions in excess of their own nominal charge, is a general effect that takes place in most charged systems next to aqueous solutions with multivalent ions and identify three different electrostatic origins for this effect: (1) counterion-counterion correlations, (2) correlations between counterions and interfacial charges, and (3) complexation. We briefly describe the first two regimes and provide a detailed characterization of the complexation regime from united atom molecular dynamics simulation of a phospholipid domain in contact with an aqueous solution. We examine the expected conditions where each regime should apply and describe a representative experimental example to illustrate each case. We point out that our results provide a characterization of ionic distributions irrespectively of whether charge inversion takes place and show that processes such as proton release and transfer are also linked to ionic correlations. We conclude with a discussion of further experimental and theoretical implications.
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