Abstract

A novel mechanism for protonating bridging O atoms (Obr) and dissolving silica is proposed that is consistent with experimental data and quantum mechanical simulations of the α-quartz (101)/water interface. The new hypothesis is that H+-transfer occurs through internal surface H-bonds (i.e., SiOH–Obr) rather than surface water H-bonds and that increasing ionic strength, I, favors formation of these internal H-bonds, leading to a larger pre-exponential factor, A, in the Arrhenius equation, k = A exp(−ΔEa/RT), and higher rates of dissolution. Projector-augmented planewave density functional theory (DFT) molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and static energy minimizations were performed on the α-quartz (101) surface and with pure water, with Cl–, Na+, and Mg2+. Classical molecular dynamics were performed on α-quartz (101) surface and pure water only. The nature of the H-bonding of the surface silanol (SiOH) groups with the solution and with other surface atoms is examined as a test of the above hypothesis. Statistically significant increases in the percentages of internal SiOH–Obr H-bonds, as well as the possibility of Obr protonation with H-bond linkage to silanol group, are predicted by these simulations, which is consistent with the new hypothesis. This new hypothesis is discussed in relation to experimental data on silicate dissolution.

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