Structural and dynamic properties of concentrated alkali halide solutions: a molecular dynamics simulation study.

The physicochemical properties of alkali halide solutions have long been attributed to the collective interactions between ions and water molecules in the solution, yet the structure of water in these systems and its effect on the equilibrium and dynamic properties of these systems are not clearly understood. Here, we present a systematic view of water structure in concentrated alkali halide solutions using molecular dynamics simulations. The results of the simulations show that the size of univalent ions in the solution has a significant effect on the dynamics of ions and other transport properties such as the viscosity that are correlated with the structural properties of water in aqueous ionic solution. Small cations (e.g., Li+) form electrostatically stabilized hydrophilic hydration shells that are different from the hydration shells of large ions (e.g., Cs+) which behave more like neutral hydrophobic particles, encapsulated by hydrogen-bonded hydration cages. The properties of solutions with different types of ion solvation change in different ways as the ion concentration increases. Examples of this are the diffusion coefficients of the ions and the viscosities of solutions. In this paper we use molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to study the changes in the equilibrium and transport properties of LiCl, RbCl, and CsI solutions at concentrations from 0.22 to 3.97 M.