The exchange of water hydroxyl hydrogen bonds between anions and water oxygens is observed directly with ultrafast 2D IR vibrational echo chemical exchange spectroscopy (CES). The OD hydroxyl stretch of dilute HOD in H 2O in concentrated (5.5 M) aqueous solutions of sodium tetrafluoroborate (NaBF 4) displays a spectrum with a broad water-like band (hydroxyl bound to water oxygen) and a resolved, blue shifted band (hydroxyl bound to BF 4 ؊ ).At short time (200 fs), the 2D IR vibrational echo spectrum has 4 peaks, 2 on the diagonal and 2 off-diagonal. The 2 diagonal peaks are the 0 -1 transitions of the water-like band and the hydroxylanion band. Vibrational echo emissions at the 1-2 transition frequencies give rise to 2 off-diagonal peaks. On a picosecond time scale, additional off-diagonal peaks grow in. These new peaks arise from chemical exchange between water hydroxyls bound to anions and hydroxyls bound to water oxygens. The growth of the chemical exchange peaks yields the time dependence of anionwater hydroxyl hydrogen bond switching under thermal equilibrium conditions as T aw ؍ 7 ؎ 1 ps. Pump-probe measurements of the orientational relaxation rates and vibrational lifetimes are used in the CES data analysis. The pump-probe measurements are shown to have the correct functional form for a system undergoing exchange.2D IR spectroscopy ͉ hydration of ions ͉ hydrogen bond dynamics ͉ ion hydrogen bonds chemical exchange ͉ ionic solutions W ater interacting with ions occurs in a wide variety of systems ranging from ocean salt water to water interacting with charged amino acids at the surfaces of proteins (1). The properties of pure liquid water are determined by the nature of its hydrogen bond network. A water molecule can have as many as 4 hydrogen bonds with other water molecules, forming an approximately tetrahedral structure. The pure water hydrogen bond network is constantly evolving with a range of time scales from tens of femtoseconds to picoseconds (2-5). Hydrogen bonds are continually forming and breaking through concerted hydrogen bond rearrangements (6). These dynamical processes can be observed on the time scale they occur in considerable detail by using ultrafast infrared spectroscopy. Measurements of spectral diffusion, described in terms of the frequencyfrequency correlation function (FFCF), by using ultrafast 2D IR vibrational echo spectroscopy (3,7,8) as well as other ultrafast IR techniques (4, 5) have determined the multiple time scales for the hydrogen bond dynamics. The slowest time component of the FFCF (1.7 ps) is associated with the randomization of the hydrogen bond network through concerted hydrogen bond rearrangements. The orientational relaxation time of pure water (2.6 ps) (2, 5) is also assigned to concerted hydrogen bond rearrangement via jump reorientation (6).In aqueous salt solutions the structure of water is modified in the vicinity of the ions as the water oxygens preferentially solvate the cations and the water hydroxyls solvate the anions (9, 10). The structures of the hyd...