Aqueous solutions of FeCl3 have been widely studied
to shed light on a number of processes from dissolution, mineralization,
biology, electrocatalysis, corrosion, to microbial biomineralization.
Yet there are little to no molecular level studies of the air–liquid
FeCl3 interface. Here, both aqueous and glycerol FeCl3 solution surfaces are investigated with polarized vibrational
sum frequency generation (SFG) spectroscopy. We also present the first
ever extreme ultraviolet reflection–absorption (XUV-RA) spectroscopy
measurements of solvated ions and complexes at a solution interface,
and observe with both X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and XUV-RA
the existence of Fe(III) at the surface and in the near surface regions
of glycerol FeCl3 solutions, where glycerol is used as
a high vacuum compatible proxy for water. XPS showed Cl– and Fe(III) species with significant Fe(III) interfacial enrichment.
In aqueous solutions, an electrical double layer (EDL) of Cl– and Fe(III) species at 0.5 m FeCl3 concentration
is observed as evidenced from an enhancement of molecular ordering
of water dipoles, consistent with the observed behavior at the glycerol
surface. At higher concentrations in water, the EDL appears to be
substantially repressed, indicative of further Fe(III) complex enrichment
and dominance of a centrosymmetric Fe(III) species that is surface
active. In addition, a significant vibrational red-shift of the dangling
OH from the water molecules that straddle the air–water interface
reveals that the second solvation shell of the surface active Fe(III)
complex permeates the topmost layer of the aqueous interface.