The protonation state of small carboxylic acids at the water surface from photoelectron spectroscopy

Ottosson, N; Wernersson, E; Söderström, J; Pokapanich, W; Kaufmann, S; Svensson, S; Persson, I; Ohrwall, G; Björneholm, O

HERO ID

1455185

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2011

Language

English

PMID

21633751

HERO ID 1455185
In Press No
Year 2011
Title The protonation state of small carboxylic acids at the water surface from photoelectron spectroscopy
Authors Ottosson, N; Wernersson, E; Söderström, J; Pokapanich, W; Kaufmann, S; Svensson, S; Persson, I; Ohrwall, G; Björneholm, O
Journal Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
Volume 13
Issue 26
Page Numbers 12261-12267
Abstract We report highly surface sensitive core-level photoelectron spectra of small carboxylic acids (formic, acetic and butyric acid) and their respective carboxylate conjugate base forms (formate, acetate and butyrate) in aqueous solution. The relative surface propensity of the carboxylic acids and carboxylates is obtained by monitoring their respective C1s signal intensities from a solution in which their bulk concentrations are equal. All the acids are found to be enriched at the surface relative to the corresponding carboxylates. By monitoring the PE signals of acetic acid and acetate as a function of total concentration, we find that the protonation of acetic acid is nearly complete in the interface layer. This is in agreement with literature surface tension data, from which it is inferred that the acids are enriched at the surface while (sodium) formate and acetate, but not butyrate, are depleted. For butyric acid, we conclude that the carboxylate form co-exists with the acid in the interface layer. The free energy cost of replacing an adsorbed butyric acid molecule with a butyrate ion at 1.0 M concentration is estimated to be >5 kJ mol(-1). By comparing concentration dependent surface excess data with the evolution of the corresponding photoemission signals it is furthermore possible to draw conclusions about how the distribution of molecules that contribute to the excess is altered with bulk concentration.
Doi 10.1039/c1cp20245f
Pmid 21633751
Wosid WOS:000291885300017
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English