We show that charge inversion, i.e. interfacial charges attracting
counterions in excess of their own nominal charge, is a general effect that
takes place in most charged systems next to aqueous solutions with multivalent
ions and identify three different electrostatic origins for this effect 1)
counterion-counterion correlations, 2) correlations between counterions and
interfacial charges and 3) complexation. We briefly describe the first two
regimes and provide a detailed characterization of the complexation regime from
united atom molecular dynamics simulation of a phospholipid domain in contact
with an aqueous solution. We examine the expected conditions where each regime
should apply and describe a representative experimental example to illustrate
each case. We point out that our results provide a characterization of ionic
distributions irrespectively of whether charge inversion takes place and show
that processes such as proton release and transfer are also linked to ionic
correlations. We conclude with a discussion of further experimental and
theoretical implications.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure