Abstract

A novel model of hydration for the chloride and iodide ions in water is proposed, which overcomes the limitations of conventional radial models. A new approach, based on a representation of the halide lone pairs, highlighted a subset of first shell water molecules featuring preferential strong interactions with the ion lone pairs, giving rise to tetrahedral hydration structures in both Cl- and I- aqueous solutions. By adopting a novel descriptor correlated to the halide-water interaction energy, we were able to split the conventional first solvation shell into a tight first hydration shell, composed of water molecules strongly interacting with the ions via hydrogen bonds, and a loose first shell containing molecules that are only slightly perturbed by the halide electrostatic charge. The picture emerging from our findings indicates that lone pairs play an important role in the description of systems where hydrogen bonds are the main interactions taking place in the solvation process.

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