Effect of water-wall interaction potential on the properties of nanoconfined water
Pradeep Kumar, Francis W. Starr, Sergey V. Buldyrev, and H. Eugene, Stanley

TL;DR
This study investigates how different purely repulsive water-wall interaction potentials influence the thermodynamic, dynamic, and structural properties of nanoconfined water, revealing that confinement effects are crucial in phase stability.
Contribution
It compares the effects of $1/r^9$ and WCA-like repulsive potentials on confined water, highlighting the importance of effective confinement over geometric separation.
Findings
Purely repulsive walls can mimic attractive interactions in confined water.
Crystal stability depends on the type of repulsive potential used.
Adjusting confinement to match effective space reveals similar phase behavior.
Abstract
Much of the understanding of bulk liquids has progressed through study of the limiting case in which molecules interact via purely repulsive forces, such as a hard-core potential. In the same spirit, we report progress on the understanding of confined water by examining the behavior of water-like molecules interacting with planar walls via purely repulsive forces and compare our results with those obtained for Lennard-Jones (LJ) interactions between the molecules and the walls. Specifically, we perform molecular dynamics simulations of 512 water-like molecules which are confined between two smooth planar walls that are separated by 1.1 nm. At this separation, there are either two or three molecular layers of water, depending on density. We study two different forms of repulsive confinements, when the interaction potential between water-wall is (i) and (ii) WCA-like repulsive…
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