| Literature DB >> 26813712 |
Abstract
Studies of the partitioning of hydrophobic solutes between water and nonpolar solvents provide estimates for the energy cost of creating hydrophobic-water contacts. This energy is a factor of three lower than the work of adhesion derived from interfacial tension measurements. This discrepancy noted by Tanford in 1979 is widely viewed as a serious challenge to our understanding of hydrophobic interactions. However, the interfacial energy of a water-alkane interface depends on chain length. A simple analysis of published data shows that the loss of rotational freedom of an alkane chain at an interface accounts quantitatively for the length-dependent contribution to interfacial tension, leaving a length-independent contribution very close to the free energy of transfer per unit of solvent accessible surface area. This analysis thus clarifies the discrepancy between the thermodynamic and interfacial tension measurements of hydrophobic interaction energy. Alkanes do not loose rotational freedom when transferred between two different liquid phases but they do at an interface. This reconciles the difference between microscopic and macroscopic measurements. Like the partitioning free energy, the work of adhesion also has a large entropy and small enthalpy at 20 (o)C.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26813712 PMCID: PMC4728684 DOI: 10.1038/srep19265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Plot of the work of adhesion (W) versus number of carbon atoms (n) in n-alkanes.
Data from Goebel and Lunkenheimer11. Eq. 1 was fitted to the data (solid curve) with the computer program R, yielding A = 20.6 ± 2.1 erg/cm2 (29.6 ± 3.0 cal/Å), B = 15.6 ± 2.4 erg/cm2 (22.4 ± 3.4 cal/Å2), and C = 0.79 ± 0.026.
Interfacial surface tension entropies.
| ΔS Alkane-vapor erg/cm2/oC | ΔS Alkane-water erg/cm2/oC | TΔS of adhesion erg/cm2 | W erg/cm2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Octane | −0.095 | −0.089 | −46.3 | 42.8 |
| −0.0835 | −47.8 | 41.4 | ||
| Dodecane | −0.088 | −0.089 | −44.2 | 45.3 |
| −0.057 | −48.0 | 44 |
Alkane-vapor data from Aveyard and Haydon910 at 20 oC (upper value) and from linear regression of data from Zeppieri et al.15 over 10–60 oC (lower value). Work of adhesion (W) from Aveyard and Haydon at 20 oC (upper) and Goebel and Lunkenheimer11 at 22 oC (lower). TΔS of adhesion was calculated from the first two columns; the value for water-vapor interfaces was mentioned in the text. The similarities between −TΔS and W indicate that hydrophobic interactions at interfaces are driven by entropy at 20 oC.