4.5 Article

Temperature dependence of dimerization and dewetting of large-scale hydrophobes: A molecular dynamics study

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 112, Issue 29, Pages 8634-8644

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp802135c

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We studied by molecular dynamics, simulations the temperature dependence of hydrophobic association and drying transition of large-scale solutes. Similar to the behavior of small solutes, we found the association process to be characterized by a large negative heat capacity change. The origin of this large change in heat capacity is the high fragility of hydrogen bonds between water molecules at the interface with hydrophobic solutes; an increase in temperature breaks more hydrogen bonds at the interface than in the bulk. With increasing temperature, both entropy and enthalpy changes for association strongly decrease, while the change in free energy weakly varies, exhibiting a small minimum at high temperatures. At around T = T-s = 360 K, the change in entropy is zero, a behavior similar to the solvation of small nonpolar solutes. Unexpectedly, we find that at T,,, there is still a substantial orientational ordering of the interfacial water molecules relative to the bulk. Nevertheless, at this point, the change in entropy vanishes due to a compensating contribution of translational entropy. Thus, at T,, there is rotational order and translational disorder of the interfacial water relative to bulk water. In addition, we studied the temperature dependence of the drying-wetting transition. By calculating the contact angle of water on the hydrophobic surface at different temperatures, we compared the critical distance observed in the simulations with the critical distance predicted by macroscopic theory. Although the deviations of the predicted from the observed values are very small (8-23%), there seems to be an increase in the deviations with an increase in temperature. We suggest that these deviations emerge due to increased fluctuations, characterizing finite systems, as the temperature increases.

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