Abstract

A synergic approach combining X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and Molecular Dynamics (MD) has been used to investigate the solvation properties of dilute aqueous and methanol solutions of the Hg(NO3)2 and Hg(TfO)2 (where TfO−=trifluoromethanesulfonate or triflate) salts. A new Lennard-Jones potential has been developed to be used in classical MD simulations of Hg2+-containing systems by refining the force-field parameters to reproduce the Hg2+ ion coordination in water in agreement with the XAS data. A different behavior of the Hg2+ ion in water and methanol has been highlighted by the analysis of the MD simulations carried out with the newly developed interaction potential: in aqueous solutions of the Hg(NO3)2 and Hg(TfO)2 salts, the Hg2+ first coordination shell is composed only of water molecules, while in methanol solutions of the same salts the Hg2+ cation coordinates both counterions and methanol molecules in its first solvation sphere. The MD results have been confirmed by comparison with the Hg L3-edge XAS experimental data. Independently of the formation of ion pairs with the counterions, the Hg2+ ion in solution tends to form heptacoordinated first shell complexes, with an arrangement of the ligands depending on the nature of the solvent: in water a 7-fold cluster of water molecules in a C2 symmetry is found, while in methanol the Hg2+ solvation shell is composed of both counterions and methanol molecules, with oxygen atoms coordinating Hg2+ arranged in a distorted pentagonal bipyramid geometry. These findings represent a significant step forward in the understanding of the solvation chemistry of the Hg2+ ion, which is fundamental to improve the efficiency of mercury removal procedures that are crucial to the safety of water resources.

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