ViewVC Help
View File | Revision Log | Show Annotations | View Changeset | Root Listing
root/group/trunk/iceWater/iceWater.tex
Revision: 3957
Committed: Tue Sep 10 14:31:32 2013 UTC (11 years, 10 months ago) by gezelter
Content type: application/x-tex
File size: 36824 byte(s)
Log Message:
Nearly final version.

File Contents

# Content
1 \documentclass[11pt]{article}
2 \usepackage{amsmath}
3 \usepackage{amssymb}
4 \usepackage{setspace}
5 %\usepackage{endfloat}
6 \usepackage{caption}
7 %\usepackage{epsf}
8 %\usepackage{tabularx}
9 \usepackage{graphicx}
10 \usepackage{multirow}
11 \usepackage{wrapfig}
12 %\usepackage{booktabs}
13 %\usepackage{bibentry}
14 %\usepackage{mathrsfs}
15 %\usepackage[ref]{overcite}
16 \usepackage[square, comma, sort&compress]{natbib}
17 \usepackage{url}
18 \pagestyle{plain} \pagenumbering{arabic} \oddsidemargin 0.0cm
19 \evensidemargin 0.0cm \topmargin -21pt \headsep 10pt \textheight
20 9.0in \textwidth 6.5in \brokenpenalty=10000
21
22 % double space list of tables and figures
23 %\AtBeginDelayedFloats{\renewcommand{\baselinestretch}{1.66}}
24 \setlength{\abovecaptionskip}{20 pt}
25 \setlength{\belowcaptionskip}{30 pt}
26
27 %\renewcommand\citemid{\ } % no comma in optional referenc note
28 \bibpunct{}{}{,}{s}{}{;}
29 \bibliographystyle{aip}
30
31
32 % \documentclass[journal = jpccck, manuscript = article]{achemso}
33 % \setkeys{acs}{usetitle = true}
34 % \usepackage{achemso}
35 % \usepackage{natbib}
36 % \usepackage{multirow}
37 % \usepackage{wrapfig}
38 % \usepackage{fixltx2e}
39
40 \usepackage[version=3]{mhchem} % this is a great package for formatting chemical reactions
41 \usepackage{url}
42
43
44 \begin{document}
45
46 \title{Simulations of solid-liquid friction at ice-I$_\mathrm{h}$ /
47 water interfaces}
48
49 \author{Patrick B. Louden and J. Daniel
50 Gezelter\footnote{Corresponding author. \ Electronic mail:
51 gezelter@nd.edu} \\
52 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry,\\
53 University of Notre Dame\\
54 Notre Dame, Indiana 46556}
55
56 \date{\today}
57 \maketitle
58 \begin{doublespace}
59
60
61 \begin{abstract}
62 We have investigated the structural and dynamic properties of the
63 basal and prismatic facets of the ice I$_\mathrm{h}$ / water
64 interface when the solid phase is drawn through the liquid
65 (i.e. sheared relative to the fluid phase). To impose the shear, we
66 utilized a velocity-shearing and scaling (VSS) approach to reverse
67 non-equilibrium molecular dynamics (RNEMD). This method can create
68 simultaneous temperature and velocity gradients and allow the
69 measurement of transport properties at interfaces. The interfacial
70 width was found to be independent of the relative velocity of the
71 ice and liquid layers over a wide range of shear rates. Decays of
72 molecular orientational time correlation functions gave similar
73 estimates for the width of the interfaces, although the short- and
74 longer-time decay components behave differently closer to the
75 interface. Although both facets of ice are in ``stick'' boundary
76 conditions in liquid water, the solid-liquid friction coefficients
77 were found to be significantly different for the basal and prismatic
78 facets of ice.
79 \end{abstract}
80
81 \newpage
82
83 \section{Introduction}
84 %-----Outline of Intro---------------
85 % in general, ice/water interface is important b/c ....
86 % here are some people who have worked on ice/water, trying to understand the processes above ....
87 % with the recent development of VSS-RNEMD, we can now look at the shearing problem
88 % talk about what we will present in this paper
89 % -------End Intro------------------
90
91 %Gay02: cites many other ice/water papers, make sure to cite them.
92
93 Understanding the ice/water interface is essential for explaining
94 complex processes such as nucleation and crystal
95 growth,\cite{Han92,Granasy95,Vanfleet95} crystal
96 melting,\cite{Weber83,Han92,Sakai96,Sakai96B} and some fascinating
97 biological processes, such as the behavior of the antifreeze proteins
98 found in winter flounder,\cite{Wierzbicki07, Chapsky97} and certain
99 terrestrial arthropods.\cite{Duman:2001qy,Meister29012013} There has
100 been significant progress on understanding the structure and dynamics
101 of quiescent ice/water interfaces utilizing both theory and
102 experiment. Haymet \emph{et al.} have done extensive work on ice I$_\mathrm{h}$,
103 including characterizing and determining the width of the ice/water
104 interface for the SPC,\cite{Karim90} SPC/E,\cite{Gay02,Bryk02} CF1,\cite{Hayward01,Hayward02} and TIP4P~\cite{Karim88} models for
105 water.
106 More recently, Haymet \emph{et al.} have investigated the effects
107 cations and anions have on crystal
108 nucleation.\cite{Bryk04,Smith05,Wilson08,Wilson10} Nada \emph{et al.}
109 have also studied ice/water
110 interfaces,\cite{Nada95,Nada00,Nada03,Nada12} and have found that the
111 differential growth rates of the facets of ice I$_\mathrm{h}$ are due to the the
112 reordering of the hydrogen bonding network.\cite{Nada05}
113
114 The movement of liquid water over the facets of ice has been less
115 thoroughly studied than the quiescent surfaces. This process is
116 potentially important in understanding transport of large blocks of
117 ice in water (which has important implications in the earth sciences),
118 as well as the relative motion of crystal-crystal interfaces that have
119 been separated by nanometer-scale fluid domains. In addition to
120 understanding both the structure and thickness of the interfacial
121 regions, it is important to understand the molecular origin of
122 friction, drag, and other changes in dynamical properties of the
123 liquid in the regions close to the surface that are altered by the
124 presence of a shearing of the bulk fluid relative to the solid phase.
125
126 In this work, we apply a recently-developed velocity shearing and
127 scaling approach to reverse non-equilibrium molecular dynamics
128 (VSS-RNEMD). This method makes it possible to calculate transport
129 properties like the interfacial thermal conductance across
130 heterogeneous interfaces,\cite{Kuang12} and can create simultaneous
131 temperature and velocity gradients and allow the measurement of
132 friction and thermal transport properties at interfaces. This has
133 allowed us to investigate the width of the ice/water interface as the
134 ice is sheared through the liquid, while simultaneously imposing a
135 weak thermal gradient to prevent frictional heating of the interface.
136 In the sections that follow, we discuss the methodology for creating
137 and simulating ice/water interfaces under shear and provide results
138 from both structural and dynamical correlation functions. We also
139 show that the solid-liquid interfacial friction coefficient depends
140 sensitively on the details of the surface morphology.
141
142 \section{Methodology}
143
144 \subsection{Stable ice I$_\mathrm{h}$ / water interfaces under shear}
145
146 The structure of ice I$_\mathrm{h}$ is well understood; it
147 crystallizes in a hexagonal space group P$6_3/mmc$, and the hexagonal
148 crystals of ice have two faces that are commonly exposed, the basal
149 face $\{0~0~0~1\}$, which forms the top and bottom of each hexagonal
150 plate, and the prismatic $\{1~0~\bar{1}~0\}$ face which forms the
151 sides of the plate. Other less-common, but still important, faces of
152 ice I$_\mathrm{h}$ are the secondary prism, $\{1~1~\bar{2}~0\}$, and
153 pyramidal, $\{2~0~\bar{2}~1\}$, faces. Ice I$_\mathrm{h}$ is normally
154 proton disordered in bulk crystals, although the surfaces probably
155 have a preference for proton ordering along strips of dangling H-atoms
156 and Oxygen lone pairs.\cite{Buch:2008fk}
157
158 \begin{table}[h]
159 \centering
160 \caption{Mapping between the Miller indices of four facets of ice in
161 the $P6_3/mmc$ crystal system to the orthorhombic $P2_12_12_1$
162 system in reference \bibpunct{}{}{,}{n}{}{,} \protect\citep{Hirsch04}.}
163 \label{tab:equiv}
164 \begin{tabular}{|ccc|} \hline
165 & hexagonal & orthorhombic \\
166 & ($P6_3/mmc$) & ($P2_12_12_1$) \\
167 crystal face & Miller indices & equivalent \\ \hline
168 basal & $\{0~0~0~1\}$ & $\{0~0~1\}$ \\
169 prism & $\{1~0~\bar{1}~0\}$ & $\{1~0~0\}$ \\
170 secondary prism & $\{1~1~\bar{2}~0\}$ & $\{1~3~0\}$ \\
171 pyramidal & $\{2~0~\bar{2}~1\}$ & $\{2~0~1\}$ \\ \hline
172 \end{tabular}
173 \end{table}
174 For small simulated ice interfaces, it is useful to work with
175 proton-ordered, but zero-dipole crystal that exposes these strips of
176 dangling H-atoms and lone pairs. When placing another material in
177 contact with one of the ice crystalline planes, it is also quite
178 useful to have an orthorhombic (rectangular) box. Recent work by
179 Hirsch and Ojam\"{a}e describes a number of alternative crystal
180 systems for proton-ordered bulk ice I$_\mathrm{h}$ using orthorhombic
181 cells.\cite{Hirsch04}
182
183 In this work, we are using Hirsch and Ojam\"{a}e's structure 6 which
184 is an orthorhombic cell ($P2_12_12_1$) that produces a proton-ordered
185 version of ice I$_\mathrm{h}$. Table \ref{tab:equiv} contains a
186 mapping between the Miller indices of common ice facets in the
187 P$6_3/mmc$ crystal system and those in the Hirsch and Ojam\"{a}e
188 $P2_12_12_1$ system.
189
190 Structure 6 from the Hirsch and Ojam\"{a}e paper has lattice
191 parameters $a = 4.49225$ \AA\ , $b = 7.78080$ \AA\ , $c = 7.33581$ \AA\
192 and two water molecules whose atoms reside at fractional coordinates
193 given in table \ref{tab:p212121}. To construct the basal and prismatic
194 interfaces, these crystallographic coordinates were used to construct
195 an orthorhombic unit cell which was then replicated in all three
196 dimensions yielding a proton-ordered block of ice I$_{h}$. To expose
197 the desired face, the orthorhombic representation was then cut along
198 the ($001$) or ($100$) planes for the basal and prismatic faces
199 respectively. The resulting block was rotated so that the exposed
200 faces were aligned with the $z$-axis normal to the exposed face. The
201 block was then cut along two perpendicular directions in a way that
202 allowed for perfect periodic replication in the $x$ and $y$ axes,
203 creating a slab with either the basal or prismatic faces exposed along
204 the $z$ axis. The slab was then replicated in the $x$ and $y$
205 dimensions until a desired sample size was obtained.
206
207 \begin{table}[h]
208 \centering
209 \caption{Fractional coordinates for water in the orthorhombic
210 $P2_12_12_1$ system for ice I$_\mathrm{h}$ in reference \bibpunct{}{}{,}{n}{}{,} \protect\citep{Hirsch04}.}
211 \label{tab:p212121}
212 \begin{tabular}{|cccc|} \hline
213 atom type & x & y & z \\ \hline
214 O & 0.7500 & 0.1667 & 0.4375 \\
215 H & 0.5735 & 0.2202 & 0.4836 \\
216 H & 0.7420 & 0.0517 & 0.4836 \\
217 O & 0.2500 & 0.6667 & 0.4375 \\
218 H & 0.2580 & 0.6693 & 0.3071 \\
219 H & 0.4265 & 0.7255 & 0.4756 \\ \hline
220 \end{tabular}
221 \end{table}
222
223 Our ice / water interfaces were created using a box of liquid water
224 that had the same dimensions (in $x$ and $y$) as the ice block.
225 Although the experimental solid/liquid coexistence temperature under
226 atmospheric pressure is close to 273~K, Haymet \emph{et al.} have done
227 extensive work on characterizing the ice/water interface, and find
228 that the coexistence temperature for simulated water is often quite a
229 bit different.\cite{Karim88,Karim90,Hayward01,Bryk02,Hayward02} They
230 have found that for the SPC/E water model,\cite{Berendsen87} which is
231 also used in this study, the ice/water interface is most stable at
232 225~$\pm$5~K.\cite{Bryk02} This liquid box was therefore equilibrated at
233 225~K and 1~atm of pressure in the NPAT ensemble (with the $z$ axis
234 allowed to fluctuate to equilibrate to the correct pressure). The
235 liquid and solid systems were combined by carving out any water
236 molecule from the liquid simulation cell that was within 3~\AA\ of any
237 atom in the ice slab.
238
239 Molecular translation and orientational restraints were applied in the
240 early stages of equilibration to prevent melting of the ice slab.
241 These restraints were removed during NVT equilibration, well before
242 data collection was carried out.
243
244 \subsection{Shearing ice / water interfaces without bulk melting}
245
246 As a solid is dragged through a liquid, there is frictional heating
247 that will act to melt the interface. To study the behavior of the
248 interface under a shear stress without causing the interface to melt,
249 it is necessary to apply a weak thermal gradient in combination with
250 the momentum gradient. This can be accomplished using the velocity
251 shearing and scaling (VSS) variant of reverse non-equilibrium
252 molecular dynamics (RNEMD), which utilizes a series of simultaneous
253 velocity exchanges between two regions within the simulation
254 cell.\cite{Kuang12} One of these regions is centered within the ice
255 slab, while the other is centrally located in the liquid
256 region. VSS-RNEMD provides a set of conservation constraints for
257 creating either a momentum flux or a thermal flux (or both
258 simultaneously) between the two slabs. Satisfying the constraint
259 equations ensures that the new configurations are sampled from the
260 same NVE ensemble as before the VSS move.
261
262 The VSS moves are applied periodically to scale and shift the particle
263 velocities ($\mathbf{v}_i$ and $\mathbf{v}_j$) in two slabs ($H$ and
264 $C$) which are separated by half of the simulation box,
265 \begin{displaymath}
266 \begin{array}{rclcl}
267
268 & \underline{\mathrm{shearing}} & &
269 \underline{~~~~~~~~~~~~\mathrm{scaling}~~~~~~~~~~~~} \\
270 \mathbf{v}_i \leftarrow &
271 \mathbf{a}_c\ & + & c\cdot\left(\mathbf{v}_i - \langle\mathbf{v}_c
272 \rangle\right) + \langle\mathbf{v}_c\rangle \\
273 \mathbf{v}_j \leftarrow &
274 \mathbf{a}_h & + & h\cdot\left(\mathbf{v}_j - \langle\mathbf{v}_h
275 \rangle\right) + \langle\mathbf{v}_h\rangle .
276
277 \end{array}
278 \end{displaymath}
279 Here $\langle\mathbf{v}_c\rangle$ and $\langle\mathbf{v}_h\rangle$ are
280 the center of mass velocities in the $C$ and $H$ slabs, respectively.
281 Within the two slabs, particles receive incremental changes or a
282 ``shear'' to their velocities. The amount of shear is governed by the
283 imposed momentum flux, $\mathbf{j}_z(\mathbf{p})$
284 \begin{eqnarray}
285 \mathbf{a}_c & = & - \mathbf{j}_z(\mathbf{p}) \Delta t / M_c \label{vss1}\\
286 \mathbf{a}_h & = & + \mathbf{j}_z(\mathbf{p}) \Delta t / M_h \label{vss2}
287 \end{eqnarray}
288 where $M_{\{c,h\}}$ is the total mass of particles within each of the
289 slabs and $\Delta t$ is the interval between two separate operations.
290
291 To simultaneously impose a thermal flux ($J_z$) between the slabs we
292 use energy conservation constraints,
293 \begin{eqnarray}
294 K_c - J_z\Delta t & = & c^2 (K_c - \frac{1}{2}M_c \langle\mathbf{v}_c
295 \rangle^2) + \frac{1}{2}M_c (\langle \mathbf{v}_c \rangle + \mathbf{a}_c)^2 \label{vss3}\\
296 K_h + J_z\Delta t & = & h^2 (K_h - \frac{1}{2}M_h \langle\mathbf{v}_h
297 \rangle^2) + \frac{1}{2}M_h (\langle \mathbf{v}_h \rangle +
298 \mathbf{a}_h)^2 \label{vss4}.
299 \label{constraint}
300 \end{eqnarray}
301 Simultaneous solution of these quadratic formulae for the scaling
302 coefficients, $c$ and $h$, will ensure that the simulation samples from
303 the original microcanonical (NVE) ensemble. Here $K_{\{c,h\}}$ is the
304 instantaneous translational kinetic energy of each slab. At each time
305 interval, it is a simple matter to solve for $c$, $h$, $\mathbf{a}_c$,
306 and $\mathbf{a}_h$, subject to the imposed momentum flux,
307 $j_z(\mathbf{p})$, and thermal flux, $J_z$, values. Since the VSS
308 operations do not change the kinetic energy due to orientational
309 degrees of freedom or the potential energy of a system, configurations
310 after the VSS move have exactly the same energy (and linear
311 momentum) as before the move.
312
313 As the simulation progresses, the VSS moves are performed on a regular
314 basis, and the system develops a thermal and/or velocity gradient in
315 response to the applied flux. In a bulk material, it is quite simple
316 to use the slope of the temperature or velocity gradients to obtain
317 either the thermal conductivity or shear viscosity.
318
319 The VSS-RNEMD approach is versatile in that it may be used to
320 implement thermal and shear transport simultaneously. Perturbations
321 of velocities away from the ideal Maxwell-Boltzmann distributions are
322 minimal, as is thermal anisotropy. This ability to generate
323 simultaneous thermal and shear fluxes has been previously utilized to
324 map out the shear viscosity of SPC/E water over a wide range of
325 temperatures (90~K) with a single 1~ns simulation.\cite{Kuang12}
326
327 For this work, we are using the VSS-RNEMD method primarily to generate
328 a shear between the ice slab and the liquid phase, while using a weak
329 thermal gradient to maintain the interface at the 225~K target
330 value. This ensures minimal melting of the bulk ice phase and allows
331 us to control the exact temperature of the interface.
332
333 \subsection{Computational Details}
334 All simulations were performed using OpenMD,\cite{OOPSE,openmd} with a
335 time step of 2 fs and periodic boundary conditions in all three
336 dimensions. Electrostatics were handled using the damped-shifted
337 force real-space electrostatic kernel.\cite{Ewald} The systems were
338 divided into 100 bins along the $z$-axis for the VSS-RNEMD moves,
339 which were attempted every 50~fs.
340
341 The interfaces were equilibrated for a total of 10 ns at equilibrium
342 conditions before being exposed to either a shear or thermal gradient.
343 This consisted of 5 ns under a constant temperature (NVT) integrator
344 set to 225K followed by 5 ns under a microcanonical integrator. Weak
345 thermal gradients were allowed to develop using the VSS-RNEMD (NVE)
346 integrator using a a small thermal flux ($-2.0\times 10^{-6}$
347 kcal/mol/\AA$^2$/fs) for a duration of 5 ns to allow the gradient to
348 stabilize. The resulting temperature gradient was $\approx$ 10K over
349 the entire 100 \AA\ box length, which was sufficient to keep the
350 temperature at the interface within $\pm 1$ K of the 225K target.
351
352 Velocity gradients were then imposed using the VSS-RNEMD (NVE)
353 integrator with a range of momentum fluxes. These gradients were
354 allowed to stabilize for 1~ns before data collection began. Once
355 established, four successive 0.5~ns runs were performed for each shear
356 rate. During these simulations, snapshots of the system were taken
357 every 1~ps, and statistics on the structure and dynamics in each bin
358 were accumulated throughout the simulations.
359
360 \section{Results and discussion}
361
362 \subsection{Interfacial width}
363 Any order parameter or time correlation function that changes as one
364 crosses an interface from a bulk liquid to a solid can be used to
365 measure the width of the interface. In previous work on the ice/water
366 interface, Haymet {\it et al.}\cite{Bryk02} have utilized structural
367 features (including the density) as well as dynamic properties
368 (including the diffusion constant) to estimate the width of the
369 interfaces for a number of facets of the ice crystals. Because
370 VSS-RNEMD imposes a lateral flow, parameters that depend on
371 translational motion of the molecules (e.g. diffusion) may be
372 artificially skewed by the RNEMD moves. A structural parameter is not
373 influenced by the RNEMD perturbations to the same degree. Here, we
374 have used the local tetrahedral order parameter as described by
375 Kumar\cite{Kumar09} and Errington\cite{Errington01} as our principal
376 measure of the interfacial width.
377
378 The local tetrahedral order parameter, $q(z)$, is given by
379 \begin{equation}
380 q(z) = \int_0^L \sum_{k=1}^{N} \Bigg(1 -\frac{3}{8}\sum_{i=1}^{3}
381 \sum_{j=i+1}^{4} \bigg(\cos\psi_{ikj}+\frac{1}{3}\bigg)^2\Bigg)
382 \delta(z_{k}-z)\mathrm{d}z \Bigg/ N_z
383 \label{eq:qz}
384 \end{equation}
385 where $\psi_{ikj}$ is the angle formed between the oxygen site on
386 central molecule $k$, and the oxygen sites on two of the four closest
387 molecules, $i$ and $j$. Molecules $i$ and $j$ are further restricted
388 to lie within the first solvation shell of molecule $k$. $N_z = \int
389 \delta(z_k - z) \mathrm{d}z$ is a normalization factor to account for
390 the varying population of molecules within each finite-width bin. The
391 local tetrahedral order parameter has a range of $(0,1)$, where the
392 larger values of $q$ indicate a larger degree of tetrahedral ordering
393 of the local environment. In perfect ice I$_\mathrm{h}$ structures,
394 the parameter can approach 1 at low temperatures, while in liquid
395 water, the ordering is significantly less tetrahedral, and values of
396 $q(z) \approx 0.75$ are more common.
397
398 To estimate the interfacial width, the system was divided into 100
399 bins along the $z$-dimension, and a cutoff radius for the first
400 solvation shell was set to 3.41~\AA\ . The $q_{z}$ function was
401 time-averaged to give yield a tetrahedrality profile of the
402 system. The profile was then fit to a hyperbolic tangent that smoothly
403 links the liquid and solid states,
404 \begin{equation}\label{tet_fit}
405 q(z) \approx
406 q_{liq}+\frac{q_{ice}-q_{liq}}{2}\left[\tanh\left(\frac{z-l}{w}\right)-\tanh\left(\frac{z-r}{w}\right)\right]+\beta\left|z-
407 \frac{r+l}{2}\right|.
408 \end{equation}
409 Here $q_{liq}$ and $q_{ice}$ are the local tetrahedral order parameter
410 for the bulk liquid and ice domains, respectively, $w$ is the width of
411 the interface. $l$ and $r$ are the midpoints of the left and right
412 interfaces, respectively. The last term in eq. \eqref{tet_fit}
413 accounts for the influence that the weak thermal gradient has on the
414 tetrahedrality profile in the liquid region. To estimate the
415 10\%-90\% widths commonly used in previous studies,\cite{Bryk02} it is
416 a simple matter to scale the widths obtained from the hyperbolic
417 tangent fits to obtain $w_{10-90} = 2.1971 \times w$.\cite{Bryk02}
418
419 In Figures \ref{fig:bComic} and \ref{fig:pComic} we see the
420 $z$-coordinate profiles for tetrahedrality, temperature, and the
421 $x$-component of the velocity for the basal and prismatic interfaces.
422 The lower panels show the $q(z)$ (black circles) along with the
423 hyperbolic tangent fits (red lines). In the liquid region, the local
424 tetrahedral order parameter, $q(z) \approx 0.75$ while in the
425 crystalline region, $q(z) \approx 0.94$, indicating a more tetrahedral
426 environment. The vertical dotted lines denote the midpoint of the
427 interfaces ($r$ and $l$ in eq. \eqref{tet_fit}). The weak thermal
428 gradient applied to the systems in order to keep the interface at
429 225~$\pm$~5K, can be seen in middle panels. The transverse velocity
430 profile is shown in the upper panels. It is clear from the upper
431 panels that water molecules in close proximity to the surface (i.e.
432 within 10~\AA\ to 15~\AA~of the interfaces) have transverse
433 velocities quite close to the velocities within the ice block. There
434 is no velocity discontinuity at the interface, which indicates that
435 the shearing of ice/water interfaces occurs in the ``stick'' or
436 no-slip boundary conditions.
437
438 \begin{figure}
439 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{bComicStrip}
440 \caption{\label{fig:bComic} The basal interfaces. Lower panel: the
441 local tetrahedral order parameter, $q(z)$, (black circles) and the
442 hyperbolic tangent fit (red line). Middle panel: the imposed
443 thermal gradient required to maintain a fixed interfacial
444 temperature. Upper panel: the transverse velocity gradient that
445 develops in response to an imposed momentum flux. The vertical
446 dotted lines indicate the locations of the midpoints of the two
447 interfaces.}
448 \end{figure}
449
450 \begin{figure}
451 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{pComicStrip}
452 \caption{\label{fig:pComic} The prismatic interfaces. Panel
453 descriptions match those in figure \ref{fig:bComic}}
454 \end{figure}
455
456 From the fits using eq. \eqref{tet_fit}, we find the interfacial
457 width for the basal and prismatic systems to be 3.2~$\pm$~0.4~\AA\ and
458 3.6~$\pm$~0.2~\AA\ , respectively, with no applied momentum flux. Over
459 the range of shear rates investigated, $0.6 \pm 0.3 \mathrm{ms}^{-1}
460 \rightarrow 5.3 \pm 0.5 \mathrm{ms}^{-1}$ for the basal system and
461 $0.9 \pm 0.2 \mathrm{ms}^{-1} \rightarrow 4.5 \pm 0.1
462 \mathrm{ms}^{-1}$ for the prismatic, we found no appreciable change in
463 the interface width. The fit values for the interfacial width ($w$)
464 over all shear rates contained the values reported above within their
465 error bars.
466
467 \subsubsection{Orientational Dynamics}
468 The orientational time correlation function,
469 \begin{equation}\label{C(t)1}
470 C_{2}(t)=\langle P_{2}(\mathbf{u}(0) \cdot \mathbf{u}(t)) \rangle,
471 \end{equation}
472 gives insight into the local dynamic environment around the water
473 molecules. The rate at which the function decays provides information
474 about hindered motions and the timescales for relaxation. In
475 eq. \eqref{C(t)1}, $P_{2}$ is the second-order Legendre polynomial,
476 the vector $\mathbf{u}$ is often taken as HOH bisector, although
477 slightly different behavior can be observed when $\mathbf{u}$ is the
478 vector along one of the OH bonds. The angle brackets denote an
479 ensemble average over all water molecules in a given spatial region.
480
481 To investigate the dynamic behavior of water at the ice interfaces, we
482 have computed $C_{2}(z,t)$ for molecules that are present within a
483 particular slab along the $z$- axis at the initial time. The change
484 in the decay behavior as a function of the $z$ coordinate is another
485 measure of the change of how the local environment changes across the
486 ice/water interface. To compute these correlation functions, each of
487 the 0.5 ns simulations was followed by a shorter 200 ps microcanonical
488 (NVE) simulation in which the positions and orientations of every
489 molecule in the system were recorded every 0.1 ps. The systems were
490 then divided into 30 bins along the $z$-axis and $C_2(t)$ was
491 evaluated for each bin.
492
493 In simulations of water at biological interfaces, Furse {\em et al.}
494 fit $C_2(t)$ functions for water with triexponential
495 functions,\cite{Furse08} where the three components of the decay
496 correspond to a fast ($<$200 fs) reorientational piece driven by the
497 restoring forces of existing hydrogen bonds, a middle (on the order of
498 several ps) piece describing the large angle jumps that occur during
499 the breaking and formation of new hydrogen bonds,and a slow (on the
500 order of tens of ps) contribution describing the translational motion
501 of the molecules. The model for orientational decay presented
502 recently by Laage and Hynes {\em et al.}\cite{Laage08,Laage11} also
503 includes three similar decay constants, although two of the time
504 constants are linked, and the resulting decay curve has two parameters
505 governing the dynamics of decay.
506
507 In our ice/water interfaces, we are at substantially lower
508 temperatures, and the water molecules are further perturbed by the
509 presence of the ice phase nearby. We have obtained the most
510 reasonable fits using triexponential functions with three distinct
511 time domains, as well as a constant piece to account for the water
512 stuck in the ice phase that does not experience any long-time
513 orientational decay,
514 \begin{equation}
515 C_{2}(t) \approx a e^{-t/\tau_\mathrm{short}} + b e^{-t/\tau_\mathrm{middle}} + c
516 e^{-t/\tau_\mathrm{long}} + (1-a-b-c)
517 \end{equation}
518 Average values for the three decay constants (and error estimates)
519 were obtained for each bin. In figures \ref{fig:basal_Tau_comic_strip}
520 and \ref{fig:prismatic_Tau_comic_strip}, the three orientational decay
521 times are shown as a function of distance from the center of the ice
522 slab.
523
524 \begin{figure}
525 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{basal_Tau_comic_strip}
526 \caption{\label{fig:basal_Tau_comic_strip} The three decay constants
527 of the orientational time correlation function, $C_2(t)$, for water
528 as a function of distance from the center of the ice slab. The
529 dashed line indicates the location of the basal face (as determined
530 from the tetrahedrality order parameter). The moderate and long
531 time contributions slow down close to the interface which would be
532 expected under reorganizations that involve large motions of the
533 molecules (e.g. frame-reorientations and jumps). The observed
534 speed-up in the short time contribution is surprising, but appears
535 to reflect the restricted motion of librations closer to the
536 interface.}
537 \end{figure}
538
539 \begin{figure}
540 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{prismatic_Tau_comic_strip}
541 \caption{\label{fig:prismatic_Tau_comic_strip}
542 Decay constants for $C_2(t)$ at the prismatic interface. Panel
543 descriptions match those in figure \ref{fig:basal_Tau_comic_strip}.}
544 \end{figure}
545
546 Figures \ref{fig:basal_Tau_comic_strip} and
547 \ref{fig:prismatic_Tau_comic_strip} show the three decay constants for
548 the orientational time correlation function for water at varying
549 displacements from the center of the ice slab for both the basal and
550 prismatic interfaces. The vertical dotted lines indicate the
551 locations of the midpoints of the interfaces as determined by the
552 tetrahedrality fits. In the liquid regions, $\tau_{middle}$ and
553 $\tau_{long}$ have consistent values around 3-4 ps and 20-40 ps,
554 respectively, and increase in value approaching the interface.
555 According to the jump model of Laage and Hynes {\em et
556 al.},\cite{Laage08,Laage11} $\tau_{middle}$ corresponds to the
557 breaking and making of hydrogen bonds and $\tau_{long}$ is explained
558 with translational motion of the molecules (i.e. frame reorientation).
559 The shortest of the three decay constants, the librational time
560 $\tau_\mathrm{short}$ has a value of about 70 fs in the liquid region,
561 and decreases in value approaching the interface. The observed
562 speed-up in the short time contribution is surprising, but appears to
563 reflect the restricted motion of librations closer to the interface.
564
565 The control systems (with no applied momentum flux) are shown with
566 black symbols in figs. \ref{fig:basal_Tau_comic_strip} and
567 \ref{fig:prismatic_Tau_comic_strip}, while those obtained while a
568 shear was active are shown in red.
569
570 Two notable features deserve clarification. First, there are
571 nearly-constant liquid-state values for $\tau_{short}$,
572 $\tau_{middle}$, and $\tau_{long}$ at large displacements from the
573 interface. Second, there appears to be a single distance, $d_{basal}$
574 or $d_{prismatic}$, from the interface at which all three decay times
575 begin to deviate from their bulk liquid values. We find these
576 distances to be approximately 15~\AA\ and 8~\AA\, respectively,
577 although significantly finer binning of the $C_2(t)$ data would be
578 necessary to provide better estimates of a ``dynamic'' interfacial
579 thickness.
580
581 Beaglehole and Wilson have measured the ice/water interface using
582 ellipsometry and find a thickness of approximately 10~\AA\ for both
583 the basal and prismatic faces.\cite{Beaglehole93} Structurally, we
584 have found the basal and prismatic interfacial width to be
585 3.2~$\pm$~0.4~\AA\ and 3.6~$\pm$~0.2~\AA. However, decomposition of
586 the spatial dependence of the decay times of $C_2(t)$ indicates that a
587 somewhat thicker interfacial region exists in which the orientational
588 dynamics of the water molecules begin to resemble the trapped
589 interfacial water more than the surrounding liquid.
590
591 Our results indicate that the dynamics of the water molecules within
592 $d_{basal}$ and $d_{prismatic}$ are being significantly perturbed by
593 the interface, even though the structural width of the interface via
594 analysis of the tetrahedrality profile indicates that bulk liquid
595 structure of water is recovered after about 4 \AA\ from the edge of
596 the ice.
597
598 \subsection{Coefficient of Friction of the Interface}
599 As liquid water flows over an ice interface, there is a distance from
600 the structural interface where bulk-like hydrodynamics are recovered.
601 Bocquet and Barrat constructed a theory for the hydrodynamic boundary
602 parameters, which include the slipping length
603 $\left(\delta_\mathrm{wall}\right)$ of this boundary layer and the
604 ``hydrodynamic position'' of the boundary
605 $\left(z_\mathrm{wall}\right)$.\cite{PhysRevLett.70.2726,PhysRevE.49.3079}
606 This last parameter is the location (relative to a solid surface)
607 where the bulk-like behavior is recovered. Work by Mundy {\it et al.}
608 has helped to combine these parameters into a liquid-solid friction
609 coefficient, which quantifies the resistance to pulling the solid
610 interface through a liquid,\cite{Mundy1997305}
611 \begin{equation}
612 \lambda_\mathrm{wall} = \frac{\eta}{\delta_\mathrm{wall}}.
613 \end{equation}
614 This expression is nearly identical to one provided by Pit {\it et
615 al.} for the solid-liquid friction of an interface,\cite{Pit99}
616 \begin{equation}\label{Pit}
617 \lambda=\frac{\eta}{\delta}
618 \end{equation}
619 where $\delta$ is the slip length for the liquid measured at the
620 location of the interface itself.
621
622 In both of these expressions, $\eta$ is the shear viscosity of the
623 bulk-like region of the liquid, a quantity which is easily obtained in
624 VSS-RNEMD simulations by fitting the velocity profile in the region
625 far from the surface.\cite{Kuang12} Assuming linear response in the
626 bulk-like region,
627 \begin{equation}\label{Kuang}
628 j_{z}(p_{x})=-\eta \left(\frac{\partial v_{x}}{\partial z}\right)
629 \end{equation}
630 Substituting this result into eq. \eqref{Pit}, we can estimate the
631 solid-liquid coefficient using the slip length,
632 \begin{equation}
633 \lambda=-\frac{j_{z}(p_{x})} {\left(\frac{\partial v_{x}}{\partial
634 z}\right) \delta}
635 \end{equation}
636
637 For ice / water interfaces, the boundary conditions are markedly
638 no-slip, so projecting the bulk liquid state velocity profile yields a
639 negative slip length. This length is the difference between the
640 structural edge of the ice (determined by the tetrahedrality profile)
641 and the location where the projected velocity of the bulk liquid
642 intersects the solid phase velocity (see Figure
643 \ref{fig:delta_example}). The coefficients of friction for the basal
644 and the prismatic facets are found to be
645 0.07~$\pm$~0.01~amu~fs\textsuperscript{-1} and
646 0.032~$\pm$~0.007~amu~fs\textsuperscript{-1}, respectively. These
647 results may seem surprising as the basal face is smoother than the
648 prismatic with only small undulations of the oxygen positions, while
649 the prismatic surface has deep corrugated channels. The applied
650 momentum flux used in our simulations is parallel to these channels,
651 however, and this results in a flow of water in the same direction as
652 the corrugations, allowing water molecules to pass through the
653 channels during the shear.
654
655 \begin{figure}
656 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{delta_example}
657 \caption{\label{fig:delta_example} Determining the (negative) slip
658 length ($\delta$) for the ice-water interfaces (which have decidedly
659 non-slip behavior). This length is the difference between the
660 structural edge of the ice (determined by the tetrahedrality
661 profile) and the location where the projected velocity of the bulk
662 liquid (dashed red line) intersects the solid phase velocity (solid
663 black line). The dotted line indicates the location of the ice as
664 determined by the tetrahedrality profile.}
665 \end{figure}
666
667
668 \section{Conclusion}
669 We have simulated the basal and prismatic facets of an SPC/E model of
670 the ice I$_\mathrm{h}$ / water interface. Using VSS-RNEMD, the ice
671 was sheared relative to the liquid while simultaneously being exposed
672 to a weak thermal gradient which kept the interface at a stable
673 temperature. Calculation of the local tetrahedrality order parameter
674 has shown an apparent independence of the interfacial width on the
675 shear rate. This width was found to be 3.2~$\pm$0.4~\AA\ and
676 3.6~$\pm$0.2~\AA\ for the basal and prismatic systems, respectively.
677
678 Orientational time correlation functions were calculated at varying
679 displacements from the interface, and were found to be similarly
680 independent of the applied momentum flux. The short decay due to the
681 restoring forces of existing hydrogen bonds decreased close to the
682 interface, while the longer-time decay constants increased in close
683 proximity to the interface. There is also an apparent dynamic
684 interface width, $d_{basal}$ and $d_{prismatic}$, at which these
685 deviations from bulk liquid values begin. We found $d_{basal}$ and
686 $d_{prismatic}$ to be approximately 15~\AA\ and 8~\AA\ . This implies
687 that the dynamics of water molecules which have similar structural
688 environments to liquid phase molecules are dynamically perturbed by
689 the presence of the ice interface.
690
691 The coefficient of liquid-solid friction for each of the facets was
692 also determined. They were found to be
693 0.07~$\pm$~0.01~amu~fs\textsuperscript{-1} and
694 0.032~$\pm$~0.007~amu~fs\textsuperscript{-1} for the basal and
695 prismatic facets respectively. We attribute the large difference
696 between the two friction coefficients to the direction of the shear
697 and to the surface structure of the crystal facets.
698
699 \section{Acknowledgements}
700 Support for this project was provided by the National Science
701 Foundation under grant CHE-0848243. Computational time was provided
702 by the Center for Research Computing (CRC) at the University of
703 Notre Dame.
704
705 \newpage
706 \bibliography{iceWater}
707
708 \end{doublespace}
709
710 % \begin{tocentry}
711 % \begin{wrapfigure}{l}{0.5\textwidth}
712 % \begin{center}
713 % \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{SystemImage.png}
714 % \end{center}
715 % \end{wrapfigure}
716 % The cell used to simulate liquid-solid shear in ice I$_\mathrm{h}$ /
717 % water interfaces. Velocity gradients were applied using the velocity
718 % shearing and scaling variant of reverse non-equilibrium molecular
719 % dynamics (VSS-RNEMD) with a weak thermal gradient to prevent melting.
720 % The interface width is relatively robust in both structual and dynamic
721 % measures as a function of the applied shear.
722 % \end{tocentry}
723
724 \end{document}
725
726 %**************************************************************
727 %Non-mass weighted slopes (amu*Angstroms^-2 * fs^-1)
728 % basal: slope=0.090677616, error in slope = 0.003691743
729 %prismatic: slope = 0.050101506, error in slope = 0.001348181
730 %Mass weighted slopes (Angstroms^-2 * fs^-1)
731 %basal slope = 4.76598E-06, error in slope = 1.94037E-07
732 %prismatic slope = 3.23131E-06, error in slope = 8.69514E-08
733 %**************************************************************