Specific Ion Effect
on the “Water Bridge”
Interaction at an Interface: A New Understanding into the Extraction
and Separation Selectivity Based upon Competitive Diffusion and Adsorption
Understanding the essence of a specific ion effect on
the intermolecular
interaction at the near-interface boundary layer during solvent extraction
is crucial for developing new approaches to achieve enhanced extraction
and separation of various valuable metals from complex aqueous solutions.
The present work aims to detect the microscopic effect from competitive
diffusion and adsorption of various salt cations in the near-interface
boundary layer on their interaction with amphiphilic model molecules,
2-ethylhexylphosphonic acid mono-(2-ethylhexyl) ester (P507), at the
air–water interface by using the Langmuir–Blodgett (LB)
monolayer technique. It was found that the interaction between cations
and P507 molecules through a long-range hydrogen bond “water
bridge” confined in the near-interface boundary layer plays
a crucial role in determining the difference in the diffusion mass
transfer rate of ions with different hydration abilities. Conventional
understanding about competitive extraction of various metal cations
controlled mainly by their thermodynamic difference in the interaction
intensity with the P–O and PO groups in P507 molecules
cannot explain such a kind of specific ion effect on the mass transfer
kinetics via ion hydration. Molecular dynamics simulation revealed
that the hydration ability of ions is the key factor determining the
mass transfer rate and interaction intensity. In the low salt concentration
region, the interaction intensity of salt cations with the P–O
and PO groups in P507 molecules is one of the determinants
of the competitive adsorption behavior at the interface. However,
in a higher salt concentration region, the specific ion salting-out
effect via ion hydration becomes significant, causing a decrease in
hydration of the target salt cation; therefore, it dominated the diffusion
mass transfer rate of ions. This work provides a new insight to understand
the kinetic role of competitive diffusion and adsorption of ions in
the near-interface boundary layer and their effect on extraction and
separation selectivity. It lays the foundation for achieving controllable
separation of target metal ions by adjusting the coexisting ion species
and their concentrations