posted on 2025-03-26, 08:15authored byAgustín J. Colussi
Orders-of-magnitude
reaction accelerations and the formation of
H2O2 in aerosolized water microdroplets are
in search of explanation. These processes are not overall spontaneous
as generally assumed because they are preceded by the forced aerosolization
of water. Nor are they caused by internal electric fields because
the electrical activation of chemical reactions requires external
static fields vectorially aligned with transition state dipoles. The
formation of H2O2 is enabled by the partial
dehydration of HO– and H+ ions in low-density
interfacial water, a process that raises their free energies of formation
and lifts the endoergicity of the prerequisite electron transfer HO– + H+ = HO• + H• in bulk water. The lack of unimolecular reaction accelerations suggests
the accelerations of bimolecular reactions are due to the higher frequencies
of molecular encounters, fewer transition state recrossings, and smaller
entropy losses for expanding solvent cavities to hold their transition
states in interfacial vs bulk water.