Abstract

Graphene oxide is a promising, emerging separation material, as it is durable, dispersible in water, and has naturally forming functional groups. Bulk studies using graphene oxide flakes have demonstrated impressive metal adsorption. However, little interfacial information about water and metal organization near graphene oxide is available. A mechanistic understanding of water and ions interactions with graphene oxide films is critical toward advanced separations, including improved sorption efficiency and membrane regeneration. We study metal ion and local water organization near graphene oxide thin films formed at the air/water interface. These films are not typical membranes and allow us to determine nanoscale information about the graphene oxide-water interface. We accomplish this with x-ray reflectivity (XR), x-ray fluorescence near total reflection (XFNTR), and vibrational sum frequency generation spectroscopy (SFG). These interface-specific techniques provide the electron density profile normal to the interface, number of adsorbed ions, and information about the orientational ordering and hydrogen-bonding network of interfacial water, respectively. Via XFNTR and SFG, we find that trivalent yttrium ions preferentially adsorb to graphene oxide and affect its structure, compared to divalent strontium and monovalent cesium ions. Two different interfacial water populations can be described, based on their hydrogen bonding strength, and the adsorbed ions affect these populations differently. These results provide fundamental information about ion and water organization at the interface and help address the large computational-experimental agreement gap for graphene oxide systems. Additionally, they are relevant for improved soft-scaffold graphene oxide membranes and downstream applications.

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