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Dive into the research topics where Aaron M. Jubb is active.

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Featured researches published by Aaron M. Jubb.


Annual Review of Physical Chemistry | 2012

Environmental Chemistry at Vapor/Water Interfaces: Insights from Vibrational Sum Frequency Generation Spectroscopy

Aaron M. Jubb; Wei Hua; Heather C. Allen

The chemistry that occurs at surfaces has been an intense area of study for many years owing to its complexity and importance in describing a wide range of physical phenomena. The vapor/water interface is particularly interesting from an environmental chemistry perspective as this surface plays host to a wide range of chemistries that influence atmospheric and geochemical interactions. The application of vibrational sum frequency generation (VSFG), an inherently surface-specific, even-order nonlinear optical spectroscopy, enables the direct interrogation of various vapor/aqueous interfaces to elucidate the behavior and reaction of chemical species within the surface regime. In this review we discuss the application of VSFG to the study of a variety of atmospherically important systems at the vapor/aqueous interface. Chemical systems presented include inorganic ionic solutions prevalent in aqueous marine aerosols, small molecular solutes, and long-chain fatty acids relevant to fat-coated aerosols. The ability of VSFG to probe both the organization and reactions that may occur for these systems is highlighted. A future perspective toward the application of VSFG to the study of environmental interfaces is also provided.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2012

Organization of Water and Atmospherically Relevant Ions and Solutes: Vibrational Sum Frequency Spectroscopy at the Vapor/Liquid and Liquid/Solid Interfaces

Aaron M. Jubb; Wei Hua; Heather C. Allen

The nature of waters hydrogen-bonding network is a vital influence on the chemistry that occurs at interfaces, but a complete understanding of interfacial water has proven elusive. Even-order nonlinear optical spectroscopies, such as vibrational sum frequency generation (VSFG) spectroscopy and heterodyne detected phase-sensitive sum frequency generation (PS-SFG) spectroscopy, are inherently surface specific. With the advent of advances in these spectroscopic techniques, researchers can now explore many long-standing questions about the dynamics and structures present at the vapor-water and water-solid interfaces. Of special interest to the atmospheric chemistry community is the accommodation of ions and solutes by waters hydrogen-bonding network. A better understanding of how ions and solutes behave in hydrogen-bonded water has afforded a fresh perspective of aqueous aerosols, because the interactions involved therein drive phenomena such as the hydrolysis of atmospheric chemical species. In this Account, we present work from our laboratory focusing on applying VSFG and the recently developed PS-SFG techniques to probe the perturbation of waters hydrogen-bonding network at the vapor-water interface by a variety of ions and solutes. We also present very recent results from our laboratory on the direct observation of the adsorption of ions at the water-CaF(2) interface. We begin by discussing the influence of ions and solutes on interfacial water structure. Results for halide salts and the acid analogs on interfacial water structure are shown to be quite different, as would be expected from differences in surface tension measurements that have been known for a long time. Also examined are systems with the largely polarizable molecular anions nitrate (NO(3)(-)), sulfate (SO(4)(2-)), carbonate (CO(3)(2-)), and bicarbonate (HCO(3)(-)).These systems feature more complicated influences on interfacial water structure than halide-containing solutions; however, our conventional VSFG results for both nitrate and sulfate solutions are in agreement with recent PS-SFG results and molecular dynamics simulations. We also discuss recent PS-SFG work on carbonate and bicarbonate systems in which the accommodation of the bicarbonate ion at the vapor-water interface is in stark contrast to the carbonate results. Perturbation of interfacial water by solutes is examined for solutions of dimethyl sulfoxide and methylsulfonic acid. PS-SFG results for these systems are striking: they illustrate the dramatic changes that interfacial water molecules undergo in the presence of solutes that are not observed with conventional VSFG. Finally, we discuss direct sulfate ion adsorption for the aqueous sodium sulfate-CaF(2) interface, with the goal of elucidating water behavior at this surface.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2013

Sulfate adsorption at the buried hematite/solution interface investigated using total internal reflection (TIR)-Raman spectroscopy.

Aaron M. Jubb; Dominique Verreault; Ralf Posner; Louise J. Criscenti; Lynn E. Katz; Heather C. Allen

Sulfate adsorption at buried mineral/solution interfaces is of great interest in geochemistry and atmospheric aerosol chemistry due to the sulfate anions environmental ubiquity and the wide role of physical and chemical phenomena that it impacts. Here we present the first application of total internal reflection-Raman (TIR-Raman) spectroscopy, a surface sensitive spectroscopy, to probe sulfate ion behavior at the buried hematite/solution interface. Hematite is the most thermodynamically stable iron oxide polymorph and as such is widely found in nature. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of a TIR-Raman approach to study simple, inorganic anion adsorption at buried interfaces. Moreover, our data suggest that inner-sphere sulfate adsorption proceeds in a bidentate fashion at the hematite surface. These results help clarify long-standing questions as to whether sulfate forms inner-sphere adsorption complexes at hematite surfaces in a mono- or bidentate fashion based on attenuated total reflection-infrared (ATR-IR) observations. Our results are discussed with perspective to this debate and the applicability of TIR-Raman spectroscopy to address ambiguities of ion adsorption to mineral surfaces.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2010

Vibrational Spectroscopic Characterization of Hematite, Maghemite, and Magnetite Thin Films Produced by Vapor Deposition

Aaron M. Jubb; Heather C. Allen


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2011

Electric Field Reversal of Na2SO4, (NH4)2SO4, and Na2CO3 Relative to CaCl2 and NaCl at the Air/Aqueous Interface Revealed by Heterodyne Detected Phase-Sensitive Sum Frequency

Wei Hua; Aaron M. Jubb; Heather C. Allen


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2009

Nitrate Anions and Ion Pairing at the Air-Aqueous Interface †

Man Xu; Cheng Y. Tang; Aaron M. Jubb; Xiangke Chen; Heather C. Allen


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Bisulfate Dehydration at Air/Solution Interfaces Probed by Vibrational Sum Frequency Generation Spectroscopy

Aaron M. Jubb; Heather C. Allen


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012

Sulfate Adsorption at the Buried Fluorite–Solution Interface Revealed by Vibrational Sum Frequency Generation Spectroscopy

Aaron M. Jubb; Heather C. Allen


Electrochimica Acta | 2012

Simultaneous in situ Kelvin probe and Raman spectroscopy analysis of electrode potentials and molecular structures at polymer covered salt layers on steel

Ralf Posner; Aaron M. Jubb; G. S. Frankel; Martin Stratmann; Heather C. Allen


Electrochimica Acta | 2012

A simultaneous Kelvin Probe and Raman spectroscopy approach for in situ surface and interface analysis

Ralf Posner; Aaron M. Jubb; G. S. Frankel; Martin Stratmann; Heather C. Allen

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Wei Hua

Ohio State University

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Louise J. Criscenti

Sandia National Laboratories

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Lynn E. Katz

University of Texas at Austin

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Man Xu

Ohio State University

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