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NMR Spectroscopy and Multiscale Modeling Shed Light on Ion–Solvent Interactions and Ion Pairing in Aqueous NaF Solutions

The balance between ion solvation and ion pairing in aqueous solutions modulates chemical and physical processes from catalysis to protein folding. Yet, despite more than a century of investigation, experimental determination of the distribution of ion-solvation and ion-pairing states remains elusiv...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The journal of physical chemistry. B 2024-09, Vol.128 (37), p.8974-8983
Main Authors: Musiał, Małgorzata, Riccardi, Demian, Suiter, Christopher L., Sontarp, Ethan J., Miller, Samantha L., Lirette, Robert L., Rehmeier, Kyle Covington, Mahata, Avik, Muzny, Chris D., Stelson, Angela C., Schwarz, Kathleen A., Widegren, Jason A.
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Language:English
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Summary:The balance between ion solvation and ion pairing in aqueous solutions modulates chemical and physical processes from catalysis to protein folding. Yet, despite more than a century of investigation, experimental determination of the distribution of ion-solvation and ion-pairing states remains elusive, even for archetypal systems like aqueous alkali halides. Here, we combine nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and multiscale modeling to disentangle ion–solvent interactions from ion pairing in aqueous sodium fluoride solutions. We have developed a high-accuracy method to collect experimental NMR resonance frequencies for both ions as functions of temperature and concentration. Comparison of these data with resonance frequencies for nonassociating salts allows us to differentiate the influence of solvation and ion pairing on NMR spectra. These high-quality experimental NMR data are used to validate our modeling framework comprising polarizable force field molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and quantum chemical calculations of NMR resonance frequencies. Our experimental and theoretical resonance frequency shifts agree over a wide range of temperatures and concentrations. Structural analysis reveals how both trends are dominated by interactions with water molecules. For the more sensitive 19F nucleus, the NMR resonance frequency decreases as hydrogen bonds between fluoride and water molecules are reduced in number with increased temperature and molality. Through a detailed analysis of the theoretical NMR resonance frequencies for both ions, we show that NMR spectroscopy can distinguish both contact ion pairs and single-solvent-separated ion pairs from free ions. This quantitative framework can be applied directly to other systems.
ISSN:1520-6106
1520-5207
1520-5207
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpcb.4c03521