Solid wetting-layers in inorganic nano-reactors: The water in imogolite nanotube case

  • Geoffrey Monet
  • , Erwan Paineau
  • , Ziwei Chai
  • , Mohamed S. Amara
  • , Andrea Orecchini
  • , Mónica Jimenéz-Ruiz
  • , Alicia Ruiz-Caridad
  • , Lucas Fine
  • , Stéphan Rouzière
  • , Li Min Liu
  • , Gilberto Teobaldi*
  • , Stéphane Rols
  • , Pascale Launois
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

By combined use of wide-angle X-ray scattering, thermo-gravimetric analysis, inelastic neutron scattering, density functional theory and density functional theory molecular dynamics simulations, we investigate the structure, dynamics and stability of the water wetting-layer in single-walled aluminogermanate imogolite nanotubes (SW Ge-INTs): an archetypal system for synthetically controllable and monodisperse nano-reactors. We demonstrate that the water wetting-layer is strongly bound and solid-like up to 300 K under atmospheric pressure, with dynamics markedly different from that of bulk water. Atomic-scale characterisation of the wetting-layer reveals organisation of the H2O molecules in a curved triangular sublattice stabilised by the formation of three H-bonds to the nanotube's inner surface, with covalent interactions sufficiently strong to promote energetically favourable decoupling of the H2O molecules in the adlayer. The evidenced changes in the local composition, structure, electrostatics and dynamics of the Ge-INT's inner surface upon the formation of the solid wetting-layer demonstrate solvent-mediated functionalisation of the nanotube's cavity at room temperature and pressure, suggesting new strategies for the design of nano-rectors towards potential control of chemical reactivity in nano-confined volumes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1869-1877
Number of pages9
JournalNanoscale Advances
Volume2
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2020

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