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30 plouden 4192
31 gezelter 4217 \usepackage{graphicx}% Include figure files
32     \usepackage{dcolumn}% Align table columns on decimal point
33     %\usepackage{bm}% bold math
34     \usepackage{times}
35     \usepackage[version=3]{mhchem} % this is a great package for formatting chemical reactions
36 plouden 4192 \usepackage{url}
37    
38     \begin{document}
39    
40 gezelter 4217 \title{Friction at Water / Ice-I$_\mathrm{h}$ interfaces: Do the
41     Facets of Ice Have Different Hydrophilicity?}
42 plouden 4192
43 gezelter 4217 \author{Patrick B. Louden}
44 plouden 4192
45 gezelter 4217 \author{J. Daniel Gezelter}
46     \email{gezelter@nd.edu.}
47     \affiliation{Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University
48     of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556}
49    
50 plouden 4192 \date{\today}
51    
52     \begin{abstract}
53 plouden 4225 In this follow up paper of the basal and prismatic facets of the
54     Ice-I$_\mathrm{h}$/water interface, we present the
55     pyramidal and secondary prismatic
56     interfaces for both the quiescent and sheared systems. The structural and
57     dynamic interfacial widths for all four crystal facets were found to be in good
58     agreement, and were found to be independent of the shear rate over the shear
59     rates investigated.
60     Decomposition of the molecular orientational time correlation function showed
61     different behavior for the short- and longer-time decay components approaching
62     normal to the interface. Lastly we show through calculation of the interfacial
63     friction coefficient that the basal and pyramidal facets are more
64     hydrophilic than the prismatic and secondary prismatic facets.
65 plouden 4224
66 plouden 4192 \end{abstract}
67    
68 gezelter 4217 \maketitle
69 plouden 4192
70     \section{Introduction}
71     Explain a little bit about ice Ih, point group stuff.
72    
73     Mention previous work done / on going work by other people. Haymet and Rick
74     seem to be investigating how the interfaces is perturbed by the presence of
75     ions. This is the conlcusion of a recent publication of the basal and
76     prismatic facets of ice Ih, now presenting the pyramidal and secondary
77 plouden 4226 prismatic facets under shear.
78 plouden 4192
79 plouden 4229 Investigation of the ice/water interface is crucial in understanding
80     the fundamental processes of nucleation,\cite{} crystal
81     growth,\cite{Han92, Granasy95, Vanfleet95} and crystal
82     melting,\cite{Weber83, Han92, Sakai96, Sakai96B}. Insight gained to these
83     properties can also be applied to biological systems of interest, such as
84     the behavior of the antifreeze protein found in winter
85     flounder,\cite{Wierzbicki07, Chapsky97} and certain terrestial
86     arthropods.\cite{Duman:2001qy,Meister29012013}%add more!
87    
88     The Ice-I$_\mathrm{h}$/water quiescent interface has been extensively studied
89     over the past 30 years. Haymet \emph{et al.} have done significant work
90     characterizing and quantifying the width of these interfaces for the
91     SPC,\cite{Karim90} SPC/E,\cite{Gay02,Bryk02}, CF1,\cite{Hayward01,Hayward02}
92     and TIP4P\cite{Karim88} models for water. In recent years, Haymet has focused
93     on investigating the effects cations and anions have on crystal
94     nucleaion and melting.\cite{Bryk04,Smith05,Wilson08,Wilson10}
95    
96    
97 plouden 4192 \section{Methodology}
98    
99     \begin{figure}
100 plouden 4226 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{Pyr_comic_strip}
101     \caption{\label{fig:pyrComic} The pyramidal interface with a shear
102     rate of 3.8 ms\textsuperscript{-1}. Lower panel: the local tetrahedral order
103 plouden 4192 parameter, $q(z)$, (black circles) and the hyperbolic tangent fit (red line).
104     Middle panel: the imposed thermal gradient required to maintain a fixed
105     interfacial temperature. Upper panel: the transverse velocity gradient that
106     develops in response to an imposed momentum flux. The vertical dotted lines
107     indicate the locations of the midpoints of the two interfaces.}
108     \end{figure}
109    
110     \begin{figure}
111 plouden 4226 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{SP_comic_strip}
112     \caption{\label{fig:spComic} The secondary prismatic interface with a shear
113     rate of 3.5 \
114     ms\textsuperscript{-1}. Panel descriptions match those in figure \ref{fig:pyrComic}.}
115 plouden 4192 \end{figure}
116    
117 plouden 4226 \subsection{Pyramidal and secondary prismatic system construction}
118 plouden 4192
119 plouden 4226 The construction of the pyramidal and secondary prismatic systems follows that
120     of
121 plouden 4192 the basal and prismatic systems presented elsewhere\cite{Louden13}, however
122 plouden 4194 the ice crystals and water boxes were equilibrated and combined at 50K
123     instead of 225K. The ice / water systems generated were then equilibrated
124     to 225K. The resulting pyramidal system was
125 plouden 4192 $37.47 \times 29.50 \times 93.02$ \AA\ with 1216
126 plouden 4229 SPC/E\cite{Berendsen97} molecules in the ice slab, and 2203 in the liquid
127     phase. The secondary
128 plouden 4226 prismatic system generated was $71.87 \times 31.66 \times 161.55$ \AA\ with
129     3840
130 plouden 4192 SPC/E molecules in the ice slab and 8176 molecules in the liquid phase.
131    
132     \subsection{Computational details}
133     % Do we need to justify the sims at 225K?
134     % No crystal growth or shrinkage over 2 successive 1 ns NVT simulations for
135 plouden 4226 % either the pyramidal or sec. prismatic ice/water systems.
136 plouden 4192
137     The computational details performed here were equivalent to those reported
138 plouden 4222 in our previous publication\cite{Louden13}. The only changes made to the
139 plouden 4192 previously reported procedure were the following. VSS-RNEMD moves were
140 plouden 4194 attempted every 2 fs instead of every 50 fs. This was done to minimize
141     the magnitude of each individual VSS-RNEMD perturbation to the system.
142 plouden 4192
143 plouden 4226 All pyramidal simulations were performed under the canonical (NVT) ensamble
144     except those
145 plouden 4192 during which statistics were accumulated for the orientational correlation
146 plouden 4226 function, which were performed under the microcanonical (NVE) ensamble. All
147     secondary prismatic
148 plouden 4192 simulations were performed under the NVE ensamble.
149    
150     \section{Results and discussion}
151 plouden 4194 \subsection{Interfacial width}
152     In the literature there is good agreement that between the solid ice and
153     the bulk water, there exists a region of 'slush-like' water molecules.
154 plouden 4219 In this region, the water molecules are structurely distinguishable and
155 plouden 4194 behave differently than those of the solid ice or the bulk water.
156     The characteristics of this region have been defined by both structural
157 plouden 4215 and dynamic properties; and its width has been measured by the change of these
158 plouden 4194 properties from their bulk liquid values to those of the solid ice.
159     Examples of these properties include the density, the diffusion constant, and
160 gezelter 4217 the translational order profile. \cite{Bryk02,Karim90,Gay02,Hayward01,Hayward02,Karim88}
161 plouden 4192
162 plouden 4215 Since the VSS-RNEMD moves used to impose the thermal and velocity gradients
163     perturb the momenta of the water molecules in
164     the systems, parameters that depend on translational motion may give
165 plouden 4194 faulty results. A stuructural parameter will be less effected by the
166 plouden 4215 VSS-RNEMD perturbations to the system. Due to this, we have used the
167 plouden 4226 local tetrahedral order parameter to quantify the width of the interface,
168 plouden 4215 which was originally described by Kumar\cite{Kumar09} and
169 plouden 4222 Errington\cite{Errington01}, and used by Bryk and Haymet in a previous study
170     of ice/water interfaces.\cite{Bryk2004b}
171 plouden 4194
172 plouden 4222 The local tetrahedral order parameter, $q(z)$, is given by
173     \begin{equation}
174     q(z) = \int_0^L \sum_{k=1}^{N} \Bigg(1 -\frac{3}{8}\sum_{i=1}^{3}
175     \sum_{j=i+1}^{4} \bigg(\cos\psi_{ikj}+\frac{1}{3}\bigg)^2\Bigg)
176     \delta(z_{k}-z)\mathrm{d}z \Bigg/ N_z
177     \label{eq:qz}
178     \end{equation}
179     where $\psi_{ikj}$ is the angle formed between the oxygen sites of molecules
180     $i$,$k$, and $j$, where the centeral oxygen is located within molecule $k$ and
181     molecules $i$ and $j$ are two of the closest four water molecules
182     around molecule $k$. All four closest neighbors of molecule $k$ are also
183     required to reside within the first peak of the pair distribution function
184     for molecule $k$ (typically $<$ 3.41 \AA\ for water).
185     $N_z = \int\delta(z_k - z) \mathrm{d}z$ is a normalization factor to account
186     for the varying population of molecules within each finite-width bin.
187 plouden 4215
188     To determine the width of the interfaces, each of the systems were
189     divided into 100 artificial bins along the
190 plouden 4194 $z$-dimension, and the local tetrahedral order parameter, $q(z)$, was
191     time-averaged for each of the bins, resulting in a tetrahedrality profile of
192     the system. These profiles are shown across the $z$-dimension of the systems
193 plouden 4226 in panel $a$ of Figures \ref{fig:pyrComic}
194     and \ref{fig:spComic} (black circles). The $q(z)$ function has a range of
195 plouden 4194 (0,1), where a larger value indicates a more tetrahedral environment.
196 plouden 4215 The $q(z)$ for the bulk liquid was found to be $\approx $ 0.77, while values of
197 plouden 4226 $\approx $ 0.92 were more common for the ice. The tetrahedrality profiles were
198 plouden 4194 fit using a hyperbolic tangent\cite{Louden13} designed to smoothly fit the
199     bulk to ice
200     transition, while accounting for the thermal influence on the profile by the
201     kinetic energy exchanges of the VSS-RNEMD moves. In panels $b$ and $c$, the
202 plouden 4226 resulting thermal and velocity gradients from the imposed kinetic energy and
203     momentum fluxes can be seen. The verticle dotted
204 plouden 4194 lines traversing all three panels indicate the midpoints of the interface
205     as determined by the hyperbolic tangent fit of the tetrahedrality profiles.
206    
207 plouden 4192 From fitting the tetrahedrality profiles for each of the 0.5 nanosecond
208 plouden 4194 simulations (panel c of Figures \ref{fig:spComic} and \ref{fig:pyrComic})
209 plouden 4215 by Eq. 6\cite{Louden13},we find the interfacial width to be
210 plouden 4226 3.2 $\pm$ 0.2 and 3.2 $\pm$ 0.2 \AA\ for the control system with no applied
211     momentum flux for both the pyramidal and secondary prismatic systems.
212 plouden 4215 Over the range of shear rates investigated,
213 plouden 4226 0.6 $\pm$ 0.2 $\mathrm{ms}^{-1} \rightarrow$ 5.6 $\pm$ 0.4 $\mathrm{ms}^{-1}$
214     for the pyramidal system and 0.9 $\pm$ 0.3 $\mathrm{ms}^{-1} \rightarrow$ 5.4
215     $\pm$ 0.1 $\mathrm{ms}^{-1}$ for the secondary prismatic, we found no
216     significant change in the interfacial width. This follows our previous
217     findings of the basal and
218 plouden 4192 prismatic systems, in which the interfacial width was invarient of the
219     shear rate of the ice. The interfacial width of the quiescent basal and
220 plouden 4226 prismatic systems was found to be 3.2 $\pm$ 0.4 \AA\ and 3.6 $\pm$ 0.2 \AA\
221     respectively, over the range of shear rates investigated, 0.6 $\pm$ 0.3
222     $\mathrm{ms}^{-1} \rightarrow$ 5.3 $\pm$ 0.5 $\mathrm{ms}^{-1}$ for the basal
223     system and 0.9 $\pm$ 0.2 $\mathrm{ms}^{-1} \rightarrow$ 4.5 $\pm$ 0.1
224     $\mathrm{ms}^{-1}$ for the prismatic.
225 plouden 4194
226     These results indicate that the surface structure of the exposed ice crystal
227     has little to no effect on how far into the bulk the ice-like structural
228     ordering is. Also, it appears that the interface is not structurally effected
229     by shearing the ice through water.
230    
231    
232 plouden 4192 \subsection{Orientational dynamics}
233 plouden 4215 %Should we include the math here?
234     The orientational time correlation function,
235     \begin{equation}\label{C(t)1}
236     C_{2}(t)=\langle P_{2}(\mathbf{u}(0)\cdot \mathbf{u}(t))\rangle,
237     \end{equation}
238     helps indicate the local environment around the water molecules. The function
239     begins with an initial value of unity, and decays to zero as the water molecule
240     loses memory of its former orientation. Observing the rate at which this decay
241     occurs can provide insight to the mechanism and timescales for the relaxation.
242     In eq. \eqref{C(t)1}, $P_{2}$ is the second-order Legendre polynomial, and
243 plouden 4224 $\mathbf{u}$ is the bisecting HOH vector. The angle brackets indicate
244 plouden 4215 an ensemble average over all the water molecules in a given spatial region.
245    
246 plouden 4194 To investigate the dynamics of the water molecules across the interface, the
247 plouden 4215 systems were divided in the $z$-dimension into bins, each $\approx$ 3 \AA\
248     wide, and \eqref{C(t)1} was computed for each of the bins. A water
249     molecule was allocated to a particular bin if it was initially in the bin
250     at time zero. To compute \eqref{C(t)1}, each 0.5 ns simulation was followed
251 plouden 4226 by an additional 200 ps NVE simulation during which the
252 plouden 4215 position and orientations of each molecule were recorded every 0.1 ps.
253    
254     The data obtained for each bin was then fit to a triexponential decay given by
255     \begin{equation}\label{C(t)_fit}
256     C_{2}(t) \approx a e^{-t/\tau_\mathrm{short}} + b e^{-t/\tau_\mathrm{middle}} +\
257     c
258     e^{-t/\tau_\mathrm{long}} + (1-a-b-c)
259     \end{equation}
260     where $\tau_{short}$ corresponds to the librational motion of the water
261     molecules, $\tau_{middle}$ corresponds to jumps between the breaking and
262     making of hydrogen bonds, and $\tau_{long}$ corresponds to the translational
263     motion of the water molecules. The last term in \eqref{C(t)_fit} accounts
264     for the water molecules trapped in the ice which do not experience any
265     long-time orientational decay.
266 plouden 4192
267 plouden 4215 In Figures \ref{fig:PyrOrient} and \ref{fig:SPorient} we see the $z$-coordinate
268     profiles for the three decay constants, $\tau_{short}$ (panel a),
269     $\tau_{middle}$ (panel b),
270     and $\tau_{long}$ (panel c) for the pyramidal and secondary prismatic systems
271     respectively. The control experiments (no shear) are shown in black, and
272     an experiment with an imposed momentum flux is shown in red. The vertical
273     dotted line traversing all three panels denotes the midpoint of the
274     interface as determined by the local tetrahedral order parameter fitting.
275     In the liquid regions of both systems, we see that $\tau_{middle}$ and
276     $\tau_{long}$ have approximately consistent values of $3-6$ ps and $30-40$ ps,
277     resepctively, and increase in value as we approach the interface. Conversely,
278     in panel a, we see that $\tau_{short}$ decreases from the liquid value
279     of $72-76$ fs as we approach the interface. We believe this speed up is due to
280     the constrained motion of librations closer to the interface. Both the
281 plouden 4226 approximate values for the decays and trends approaching the interface match
282     those reported previously for the basal and prismatic interfaces.
283 plouden 4192
284 plouden 4215 As done previously, we have attempted to quantify the distance, $d_{pyramidal}$
285 plouden 4226 and $d_{secondary prismatic}$, from the
286 plouden 4215 interface that the deviations from the bulk liquid values begin. This was done
287     by fitting the orientational decay constant $z$-profiles by
288     \begin{equation}\label{tauFit}
289 plouden 4226 \tau(z)\approx\tau_{liquid}+(\tau_{wall}-\tau_{liquid})e^{-(z-z_{wall})/d}
290 plouden 4215 \end{equation}
291 plouden 4226 where $\tau_{liquid}$ and $\tau_{wall}$ are the liquid and projected wall
292 plouden 4215 values of the decay constants, $z_{wall}$ is the location of the interface,
293     and $d$ is the displacement from the interface at which these deviations
294     occur. The values for $d_{pyramidal}$ and $d_{secondary prismatic}$ were
295     determined
296     for each of the decay constants, and then averaged for better statistics
297 plouden 4226 ($\tau_{middle}$ was ommitted for secondary prismatic). For the pyramidal
298     system,
299 plouden 4215 $d_{pyramidal}$ was found to be 2.7 \AA\ for both the control and the sheared
300     system. We found $d_{secondary prismatic}$ to be slightly larger than
301     $d_{pyramidal}$ for both the control and with an applied shear, with
302     displacements of $4$ \AA\ for the control system and $3$ \AA\ for the
303     experiment with the imposed momentum flux. These values are consistent with
304     those found for the basal ($d_{basal}\approx2.9$ \AA\ ) and prismatic
305     ($d_{prismatic}\approx3.5$ \AA\ ) systems.
306 plouden 4192
307 plouden 4194 \subsection{Coefficient of friction of the interfaces}
308 plouden 4222 While investigating the kinetic coefficient of friction, there was found
309     to be a dependence for $\mu_k$
310 plouden 4215 on the temperature of the liquid water in the system. We believe this
311     dependence
312     arrises from the sharp discontinuity of the viscosity for the SPC/E model
313     at temperatures approaching 200 K\cite{kuang12}. Due to this, we propose
314 plouden 4224 a weighting to the interfacial friction coefficient, $\kappa$ by the
315 plouden 4226 shear viscosity of the fluid at 225 K. The interfacial friction coefficient
316     relates the shear stress with the relative velocity of the fluid normal to the
317 plouden 4224 interface:
318     \begin{equation}\label{Shenyu-13}
319     j_{z}(p_{x}) = \kappa[v_{x}(fluid)-v_{x}(solid)]
320 plouden 4215 \end{equation}
321 plouden 4224 where $j_{z}(p_{x})$ is the applied momentum flux (shear stress) across $z$
322     in the
323     $x$-dimension, and $v_{x}$(fluid) and $v_{x}$(solid) are the velocities
324     directly adjacent to the interface. The shear viscosity, $\eta(T)$, of the
325 plouden 4226 fluid can be determined under a linear response of the momentum
326 plouden 4224 gradient to the applied shear stress by
327     \begin{equation}\label{Shenyu-11}
328     j_{z}(p_{x}) = \eta(T) \frac{\partial v_{x}}{\partial z}.
329 plouden 4215 \end{equation}
330 plouden 4224 Using eqs \eqref{Shenyu-13} and \eqref{Shenyu-11}, we can find the following
331     expression for $\kappa$,
332     \begin{equation}\label{kappa-1}
333     \kappa = \eta(T) \frac{\partial v_{x}}{\partial z}\frac{1}{[v_{x}(fluid)-v_{x}(solid)]}.
334 plouden 4215 \end{equation}
335 plouden 4224 Here is where we will introduce the weighting term of $\eta(225)/\eta(T)$
336     giving us
337     \begin{equation}\label{kappa-2}
338     \kappa = \frac{\eta(225)}{[v_{x}(fluid)-v_{x}(solid)]}\frac{\partial v_{x}}{\partial z}.
339 plouden 4215 \end{equation}
340 plouden 4224
341     To obtain the value of $\eta(225)$ for the SPC/E model, a $31.09 \times 29.38
342 plouden 4226 \times 124.39$ \AA\ box with 3744 SPC/E liquid water molecules was
343     equilibrated to 225K,
344 plouden 4224 and 5 unique shearing experiments were performed. Each experiment was
345 plouden 4226 conducted in the NVE and were 5 ns in
346 plouden 4224 length. The VSS were attempted every timestep, which was set to 2 fs.
347 plouden 4226 For our SPC/E systems, we found $\eta(225)$ to be 0.0148 $\pm$ 0.0007 Pa s,
348 plouden 4224 roughly ten times larger than the value found for 280 K SPC/E bulk water by
349     Kuang\cite{kuang12}.
350    
351     The interfacial friction coefficient, $\kappa$, can equivalently be expressed
352     as the ratio of the viscosity of the fluid to the slip length, $\delta$, which
353     is an indication of how 'slippery' the interface is.
354     \begin{equation}\label{kappa-3}
355     \kappa = \frac{\eta}{\delta}
356 plouden 4215 \end{equation}
357 plouden 4224 In each of the systems, the interfacial temperature was kept fixed to 225K,
358     which ensured the viscosity of the fluid at the
359     interace was approximately the same. Thus, any significant variation in
360     $\kappa$ between
361     the systems indicates differences in the 'slipperiness' of the interfaces.
362     As each of the ice systems are sheared relative to liquid water, the
363     'slipperiness' of the interface can be taken as an indication of how
364     hydrophobic or hydrophilic the interface is. The calculated $\kappa$ values
365     found for the four crystal facets of Ice-I$_\mathrm{h}$ investigated are shown
366     in Table \ref{tab:kapa}. The basal and pyramidal facets were found to have
367 plouden 4225 similar values of $\kappa \approx$ 0.0006
368 plouden 4226 (amu \AA\textsuperscript{-2} fs\textsuperscript{-1}), while values of
369     $\kappa \approx$ 0.0003 (amu \AA\textsuperscript{-2} fs\textsuperscript{-1})
370     were found for the prismatic and secondary prismatic systems.
371     These results indicate that the basal and pyramidal facets are
372     more hydrophilic than the prismatic and secondary prismatic facets.
373 plouden 4224 %This indicates something about the similarity between the two facets that
374     %share similar values...
375     %Maybe find values for kappa for other materials to compare against?
376 plouden 4194
377 plouden 4219 \begin{table}[h]
378     \centering
379 plouden 4224 \caption{$\kappa$ values for the basal, prismatic, pyramidal, and secondary \
380     prismatic facets of Ice-I$_\mathrm{h}$}
381 plouden 4219 \label{tab:kappa}
382     \begin{tabular}{|ccc|} \hline
383 plouden 4226 & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{$\kappa_{Drag direction}$ (amu \AA\textsuperscript{-2} fs\textsuperscript{-1})} \\
384 plouden 4219 Interface & $\kappa_{x}$ & $\kappa_{y}$ \\ \hline
385     basal & $0.00059 \pm 0.00003$ & $0.00065 \pm 0.00008$ \\
386     prismatic & $0.00030 \pm 0.00002$ & $0.00030 \pm 0.00001$ \\
387     pyramidal & $0.00058 \pm 0.00004$ & $0.00061 \pm 0.00005$ \\
388 plouden 4226 secondary prismatic & $0.00035 \pm 0.00001$ & $0.00033 \pm 0.00002$ \\ \hline
389 plouden 4219 \end{tabular}
390     \end{table}
391    
392    
393 plouden 4215
394    
395 plouden 4222 %\begin{table}[h]
396     %\centering
397     %\caption{Solid-liquid friction coefficients (measured in amu~fs\textsuperscript\
398     %{-1}). \\
399     %\textsuperscript{a} See ref. \onlinecite{Louden13}. }
400     %\label{tab:lambda}
401     %\begin{tabular}{|ccc|} \hline
402     % & \multicolumn{2}{c|}{Drag direction} \\
403     % Interface & $x$ & $y$ \\ \hline
404     % basal\textsuperscript{a} & $0.08 \pm 0.02$ & $0.09 \pm 0.03$ \\
405     % prismatic (T = 225)\textsuperscript{a} & $0.037 \pm 0.008$ & $0.04 \pm 0.01$ \\
406     % prismatic (T = 230) & $0.10 \pm 0.01$ & $0.070 \pm 0.006$\\
407     % pyramidal & $0.13 \pm 0.03$ & $0.14 \pm 0.03$ \\
408 plouden 4226 % secondary prismatic & $0.13 \pm 0.02$ & $0.12 \pm 0.03$ \\ \hline
409 plouden 4222 %\end{tabular}
410     %\end{table}
411 plouden 4194
412    
413 plouden 4192 \begin{figure}
414     \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{Pyr-orient}
415     \caption{\label{fig:PyrOrient} The three decay constants of the
416     orientational time correlation function, $C_2(t)$, for water as a function
417     of distance from the center of the ice slab. The vertical dashed line
418     indicates the edge of the pyramidal ice slab determined by the local order
419     tetrahedral parameter. The control (black circles) and sheared (red squares)
420     experiments were fit by a shifted exponential decay (Eq. 9\cite{Louden13})
421     shown by the black and red lines respectively. The upper two panels show that
422     translational and hydrogen bond making and breaking events slow down
423     through the interface while approaching the ice slab. The bottom most panel
424     shows the librational motion of the water molecules speeding up approaching
425     the ice block due to the confined region of space allowed for the molecules
426     to move in.}
427     \end{figure}
428    
429     \begin{figure}
430     \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{SP-orient-less}
431     \caption{\label{fig:SPorient} Decay constants for $C_2(t)$ at the secondary
432 plouden 4226 prismatic face. Panel descriptions match those in \ref{fig:PyrOrient}.}
433 plouden 4192 \end{figure}
434    
435    
436    
437     \section{Conclusion}
438 plouden 4222 We present the results of molecular dynamics simulations of the pyrmaidal
439     and secondary prismatic facets of an SPC/E model of the
440     Ice-I$_\mathrm{h}$/water interface. The ice was sheared through the liquid
441     water while being exposed to a thermal gradient to maintain a stable
442 plouden 4226 interface by using the minimally perturbing VSS RNEMD method. In agreement
443     with our previous findings for the basal and prismatic facets, the interfacial
444 plouden 4222 width was found to be independent of shear rate as measured by the local
445 plouden 4224 tetrahedral order parameter. This width was found to be
446 plouden 4226 3.2~$\pm$ 0.2~\AA\ for both the pyramidal and the secondary prismatic systems.
447 plouden 4224 These values are in good agreement with our previously calculated interfacial
448 plouden 4226 widths for the basal (3.2~$\pm$ 0.4~\AA\ ) and prismatic (3.6~$\pm$ 0.2~\AA\ )
449 plouden 4224 systems.
450 plouden 4192
451 plouden 4224 Orientational dynamics of the Ice-I$_\mathrm{h}$/water interfaces were studied
452     by calculation of the orientational time correlation function at varying
453     displacements normal to the interface. The decays were fit
454     to a tri-exponential decay, where the three decay constants correspond to
455     the librational motion of the molecules driven by the restoring forces of
456     existing hydrogen bonds ($\tau_{short}$ $\mathcal{O}$(10 fs)), jumps between
457     two different hydrogen bonds ($\tau_{middle}$ $\mathcal{O}$(1 ps)), and
458     translational motion of the molecules ($\tau_{long}$ $\mathcal{O}$(100 ps)).
459     $\tau_{short}$ was found to decrease approaching the interface due to the
460     constrained motion of the molecules as the local environment becomes more
461     ice-like. Conversely, the two longer-time decay constants were found to
462     increase at small displacements from the interface. As seen in our previous
463     work on the basal and prismatic facets, there appears to be a dynamic
464     interface width at which deviations from the bulk liquid values occur.
465     We had previously found $d_{basal}$ and $d_{prismatic}$ to be approximately
466 plouden 4226 2.8~\AA\ and 3.5~\AA. We found good agreement of these values for the
467 plouden 4224 pyramidal and secondary prismatic systems with $d_{pyramidal}$ and
468 plouden 4226 $d_{secondary prismatic}$ to be 2.7~\AA\ and 3~\AA. For all four of the
469     facets, no apparent dependence of the dynamic width on the shear rate was
470     found.
471 plouden 4224
472     %Paragraph summarizing the Kappa values
473 plouden 4226 The interfacial friction coefficient, $\kappa$, was determined for each facet
474     interface. We were able to reach an expression for $\kappa$ as a function of
475     the velocity profile of the system which is scaled by the viscosity of the liquid
476 plouden 4224 at 225 K. In doing so, we have obtained an expression for $\kappa$ which is
477     independent of temperature differences of the liquid water at far displacements
478     from the interface. We found the basal and pyramidal facets to have
479 plouden 4225 similar $\kappa$ values, of $\kappa \approx$ 0.0006
480 plouden 4226 (amu \AA\textsuperscript{-2} fs\textsuperscript{-1}). However, the
481 plouden 4224 prismatic and secondary prismatic facets were found to have $\kappa$ values of
482 plouden 4226 $\kappa \approx$ 0.0003 (amu \AA\textsuperscript{-2} fs\textsuperscript{-1}).
483 plouden 4225 As these ice facets are being sheared relative to liquid water, with the
484     structural and dynamic width of all four
485 plouden 4224 interfaces being approximately the same, the difference in the coefficient of
486     friction indicates the hydrophilicity of the crystal facets are not
487     equivalent. Namely, that the basal and pyramidal facets of Ice-I$_\mathrm{h}$
488     are more hydrophilic than the prismatic and secondary prismatic facets.
489 plouden 4192
490 plouden 4222
491 gezelter 4217 \begin{acknowledgments}
492     Support for this project was provided by the National
493     Science Foundation under grant CHE-1362211. Computational time was
494     provided by the Center for Research Computing (CRC) at the
495     University of Notre Dame.
496     \end{acknowledgments}
497 plouden 4192
498     \newpage
499 gezelter 4217
500 plouden 4192 \bibliography{iceWater}
501    
502     \end{document}