Experimentally Quantifying Anion Polarizability at the Air/Water Interface
Yujin Tong, Igor Ying Zhang, R. Kramer Campen (Fritz Haber Institute, of the Max Planck Society, Berlin Germany)

TL;DR
This study uses nonlinear optical spectroscopy to measure how the polarizability of interfacial ClO₄⁻ anions differs from bulk values, revealing environment-induced symmetry breaking and coverage-dependent effects not captured by current theories.
Contribution
First experimental quantification of interfacial anion polarizability, showing environment and coverage effects that challenge existing theoretical models.
Findings
Interfacial environment induces symmetry breaking in ClO₄⁻
Depolarization ratio is >2× larger at interface and depends on coverage
Measured changes align with surface potential and tension variations
Abstract
The adsorption of anions from aqueous solution on the air/water interface controls important heterogeneous chemistry in the atmosphere and is thought to have similar physics to anion adsorption at hydrophobic interfaces more generally. While much theoretical and experimental work over the last 20 years has made clear that the adsorption of large, polarizable anions is thermodynamically favorable, determining the role of polarizability in adsorption has proven surprisingly challenging. Simple physical models make clear that nonpolarizable anions will not adsorb, but trends in adsorption are difficult to rationalize based on polarizability and in some theoretical approaches adsorption is observed without change in anion polarization. Because there are no experimental studies of interfacial anion polarizability, one possible explanation of these results is that theoretical descriptions…
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