Abstract

Dissolved ions in aqueous media are ubiquitous in many physicochemical processes, with a direct impact on research fields, such as chemistry, climate, biology, and industry. Ions play a crucial role in the structure of the surrounding network of water molecules as they can either weaken or strengthen it. Gaining a thorough understanding of the underlying forces from small clusters to bulk solutions is still challenging, which motivates further investigations. Through a systematic analysis of the interaction energies obtained from high-level electronic structure methodologies, we assessed various dispersion-corrected density functional approaches, as well as ab initio-based data-driven potential models for halide ion–water clusters. We introduced an active learning scheme to automate the generation of optimally weighted datasets, required for the development of efficient bottom-up anion–water models. Using an evolutionary programming procedure, we determined optimized and reference configurations for such polarizable and first-principles-based representation of the potentials, and we analyzed their structural characteristics and energetics in comparison with estimates from DF-MP2 and DFT+D quantum chemistry computations. Moreover, we presented new benchmark datasets, considering both equilibrium and non-equilibrium configurations of higher-order species with an increasing number of water molecules up to 54 for each F, Cl, Br, and I anions, and we proposed a validation protocol to cross-check methods and approaches. In this way, we aim to improve the predictive ability of future molecular computer simulations for determining the ongoing conflicting distribution of different ions in aqueous environments, as well as the transition from nanoscale clusters to macroscopic condensed phases.

Highlights

  • Introduction iationsThe study of water’s properties is one of the most intense research topics [1–7]

  • Ion hydration is a key point in understanding a variety of physicochemical processes; both experimental and theoretical studies are seeking to give a definitive picture of how ions influence the water molecules around them [10,12,14–16,18–37]

  • We found that the error increases as the number of water molecules increases, indicating the inability of the DFT functionals to deal with additive long-range interactions, while by adding dispersion such errors have been balanced or even eliminated

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Summary

Introduction

Introduction iationsThe study of water’s properties is one of the most intense research topics [1–7]. You can rarely find water in its pure state, and the presence of other molecules is common, which can produce changes in the observed behavior of the water network. This is the case of ions, and depending on their charge and size could be strongly hydrated or disrupt the structure of the surrounding water hydrogen bonding [8–19]. Ion hydration is a key point in understanding a variety of physicochemical processes; both experimental and theoretical studies are seeking to give a definitive picture of how ions influence the water molecules around them [10,12,14–16,18–37].

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