Pressure-Dependent Structure of Methanol-Water Mixtures up to 1.2 GPa: Neutron Diffraction Experiments and Molecular Dynamics Simulations

Molecules. 2021 Feb 25;26(5):1218. doi: 10.3390/molecules26051218.

Abstract

Total scattering structure factors of per-deuterated methanol and heavy water, CD3OD and D2O, have been determined across the entire composition range as a function of pressure up to 1.2 GPa, by neutron diffraction. The largest variations due to increasing pressure were observed below a scattering variable value of 5 Å-1, mostly as shifts in terms of the positions of the first and second maxima. Molecular dynamics computer simulations, using combinations of all-atom potentials for methanol and various water force fields, were conducted at the experimental pressures with the aim of interpreting neutron diffraction results. The peak-position shifts mentioned above could be qualitatively reproduced by simulations, although in terms of peak intensities, the accord between neutron diffraction and molecular dynamics was much less satisfactory. However, bearing in mind that increasing pressure must have a profound effect on repulsive forces between neighboring molecules, the agreement between experiment and computer simulation can certainly be termed as satisfactory. In order to reveal the influence of changing pressure on local intermolecular structure in these "simplest of complex" hydrogen-bonded liquid mixtures, simulated structures were analyzed in terms of hydrogen bond-related partial radial distribution functions and size distributions of hydrogen-bonded cyclic entities. Distinct differences between pressure-dependent structures of water-rich and methanol-rich composition regions were revealed.

Keywords: alcohol–water mixtures; high pressure; molecular dynamics simulations; neutron diffraction.

MeSH terms

  • Deuterium Oxide / chemistry*
  • Hydrogen Bonding
  • Methanol / chemistry*
  • Molecular Dynamics Simulation*
  • Molecular Structure
  • Neutron Diffraction
  • Pressure

Substances

  • Deuterium Oxide
  • Methanol