NWO - Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek - print-logo

URL of this page :
https://archief.nwo-i.nl/en/news/2017/05/24/druppeltjes-nanowater-veel-sterker-geordend-dan-verwacht/

Printed on :
March 20th 2025
19:27:14

Unique perspective on miniscule droplets
The researchers used a special technique called vibrational sum frequency scattering to study the structure of the surface of water droplets. In this technique two extremely short and intense laser pulses are directed at the water droplets: an infrared beam and a visible laser beam. When these two laser beams together hit the surface of the droplet, they generate light at a new color that provides specific information about the outermost molecular layer of the water droplets. AMOLF group leader Huib Bakker is excited. "It is hard to detect the extremely weak and divergent light generated at the surfaces of such small droplets. I am glad that together with our collaborators of the group of Sylvie Roke in Lausanne, we succeeded in detecting this light. So far we are the only research groups that managed to do this."

Hydrogen bonding as strong as in ice
The surface of the water droplets turns out to be much more ordered than that of normal water and is comparable to super cooled (liquid < 0 °C water) water in which the water molecules have very strong hydrogen bond interactions. In ice, these interactions lead to a stable tetrahedral surrounding of each water molecule. Surprisingly, this type of structure was found on the surface of the droplets at room temperature. "The surface behaves as if the temperature is about 50 degrees lower", says Bakker.  "We did not expect this."

Chemical processes
This research provides valuable insight into the properties of nanometric water drops. "The chemical properties of these droplets depend on how the water molecules are organized at the surface, so it's really important to understand what's going on there," explained Bakker. Further research could target the surface properties of water droplets by adding salt. This would make a more realistic model of marine aerosols that consist of salty water surrounded by a hydrophobic environment. Salt may either enhance the water network or reduce its strength.

Reference
Nikolay Smolentsev, Wilbert J. Smit, Huib J. Bakker and Sylvie Roke, 'The interfacial structure of water droplets in a hydrophobic liquid', Nature Communications.
doi: 10.1038/NCOMMS15548.

Confidental Infomation