RESUMEN
Hydration free energies are dictated by a subtle balance of hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions. We present here a spectroscopic approach, which gives direct access to the two main contributions: Using THz-spectroscopy to probe the frequency range of the intermolecular stretch (150-200â cm-1 ) and the hindered rotations (450-600â cm-1 ), the local contributions due to cavity formation and hydrophilic interactions can be traced back. We show that via THz calorimetry these fingerprints can be correlated 1 : 1 with the group specific solvation entropy and enthalpy. This allows to deduce separately the hydrophobic (i.e. cavity formation) and hydrophilic contributions to thermodynamics, as shown for hydrated alcohols as a case study. Accompanying molecular dynamics simulations quantitatively support our experimental results. In the future our approach will allow to dissect hydration contributions in inhomogeneous mixtures and under non-equilibrium conditions.
Asunto(s)
Agua , Entropía , Interacciones Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Soluciones , Análisis Espectral , Termodinámica , Agua/químicaRESUMEN
THz spectroscopy was used to probe changes that occur in the dynamics of the hydrogen bond network upon solvation of alcohol chains. The THz spectra can be decomposed into the spectrum of bulk water, tetrahedral hydration water, and more disordered (or interstitial) hydration water. The tetrahedrally ordered hydration water exhibits a band at 195â cm-1 and is localized around the hydrophobic moiety of the alcohol. The interstitial component yields a band at 164â cm-1 which is associated with hydration water in the first hydration shell. These temperature-dependent changes in the low-frequency spectrum of solvated alcohol chains can be correlated with changes of heat capacity, entropy, and free energy upon solvation. Surprisingly, not the tetrahedrally ordered component but the interstitial hydration water is found to be mainly responsible for the temperature-dependent change in ΔCp and ΔG. The solute-specific offset in free energy is attributed to void formation and scales linearly with the chain length.