AI Article Synopsis

  • Calcium perchlorate has the ability to stabilize liquid water on Mars due to its hygroscopic nature and low freezing temperature, making it a candidate for Martian salts.
  • Experiments using Raman spectroscopy showed that higher concentrations of calcium perchlorate lead to more solvent-shared ion pairs, enhancing its hygroscopic properties.
  • Further studies revealed that as temperatures decrease, the formation of solvent-shared ion pairs increases, which disrupts the normal structure of water and contributes to the extremely low eutectic temperature and supercooling effects in calcium perchlorate solutions.

Article Abstract

As a candidate of Martian salts, calcium perchlorate [Ca(ClO)] has the potential to stabilize liquid water on the Martian surface because of its hygroscopicity and low freezing temperature when forming aqueous solution. These two properties of electrolytes in general have been suggested to result from the specific cation-anion-water interaction (ion pairing) that interrupts the structure of solvent water. To investigate how this concentration-dependent and temperature-dependent ion pairing process in aqueous Ca(ClO) solution leads to its high hygroscopic property and the extreme low eutectic temperature, we have conducted two sets of experiments. First, the effects of concentration on aqueous calcium perchlorate from 3 to 7.86 on ion pairing were investigated using Raman spectroscopy. Deconvolution of the Raman symmetric stretching band (ν) of ClO showed the enhanced formation of solvent-shared ion pairs upon increasing salt concentration at room temperature. We have confirmed that the low tendency of forming contact ion pairs in concentrated solution contributes to the high hygroscopicity of the salt. Second, the near eutectic samples were studied as a function of temperature by both combined differential scanning calorimetry-Raman spectroscopic experiments and X-ray diffraction. The number of solvent-shared ion pairs was found to increase with decreasing temperature when cooled below the temperature of maximum density of the solution, driven by a change in water toward an ice-like structure in the supercooled regime. The massive presence of solvent-shared ion pairs in turn limits the development of the long-range order in the tetrahedral networks of water molecules, which is responsible for the extremely low eutectic point and deep supercooling effects observed in the Ca(ClO)-HO system.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.9b08009DOI Listing

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