Podcast cover for "Extreme Nanoconfinement Reshapes the Self-Dissociation of Water" by Chenyu Wang et al.
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Extreme Nanoconfinement Reshapes the Self-Dissociation of Water

Dec 21, 202511:26
cond-mat.mes-hallphysics.chem-ph
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Abstract

Water's ability to self-dissociate into H$_3$O$^+$ and OH$^-$ ions is central to acid-base chemistry and bioenergetics. Recent experimental advances have enabled the confinement of water down to the nanometre scale, even to the single-molecule limit, yet how this process is altered at the extreme nanoconfinement remains unclear. Using \emph{ab-initio} calculations and enhanced-sampling machine-learning potential molecular dynamics, we show that monolayer-confined water exhibits a markedly lower barrier to auto-dissociation than bulk water. Confinement restructures both intramolecular bonding and the intermolecular hydrogen-bond network, while enforcing quasi-2D dipolar correlations that amplify dielectric fluctuations. Our results imply that two-dimensional confined water could act as a \emph{superdielectric} medium and may exhibit \emph{superionic} behavior, as observed in recent experiments. These findings reveal confinement as a powerful route to enhanced proton activity, shedding light on geochemical niches, biomolecular environments, and nanofluidic systems where water's chemistry is fundamentally reshaped.

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Cite This Paper

Year:2025
Category:cond-mat.mes-hall
APA

Wang, C., Yin, W., Zhou, K. (2025). Extreme Nanoconfinement Reshapes the Self-Dissociation of Water. arXiv preprint arXiv:2512.18716.

MLA

Chenyu Wang, Wanjian Yin, and Ke Zhou. "Extreme Nanoconfinement Reshapes the Self-Dissociation of Water." arXiv preprint arXiv:2512.18716 (2025).