A groundbreaking study titled "Water Structure and Electric Fields at Oil Droplet Interfaces" was published in Nature by a collaborative team led by Prof. Wei Min of Columbia University and Prof. Teresa Head-Gordon of UC Berkeley. Co-first authors are Dr. Lixue Shi and Dr. Allen LaCour, with critical contributions from Naixin Qian, Joseph Heindel, Xiaoqi Lang, and Ruoqi Zhao.
Overall
The behavior of water at hydrophobic interfaces has perplexed scientists for over a century, spanning chemistry, biology, materials science, geology, and engineering. Recent discoveries—such as the anomalous chemistry of water microdroplets and contact electro-catalysis—highlight the pivotal role of interfacial water. This new study in Nature systematically resolves the disordered molecular structure and ultrahigh electrostatic fields (~40–90 MV/cm) at oil-water mesoscopic interfaces, overturning textbook assumptions about the "inert" nature of hydrophobic surfaces and opening new avenues for catalysis, biomedicine, and green energy.
Methodological Breakthrough
For decades, sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy has dominated interfacial water studies but suffered from inherent limitations. The team pioneered a novel approach: integrating high-resolution Raman spectroscopy with multivariate curve resolution (MCR) algorithms (Figure 1). By isolating solvent background and solute-correlated (SC) spectral signals with unprecedented signal-to-noise ratios, they achieved the first nanoscale-resolution measurements of interfacial layers in oil-water emulsions.
Key Findings
Cross-Disciplinary Impact
The discovery of disordered interfaces and colossal electric fields could transform understanding of:
Nature
Water structure and electric fields at the interface of oil droplets
19-Mar-2025