AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers explored the link between molecular polarizability and partial molar volume in water, crucial for understanding how substances dissolve in water.
  • The relationship discovered is non-homogeneous and varies based on the chemical nature of the solute, indicating specific interactions between solutes and solvents.
  • The findings were validated using a diverse set of around 200 organic molecules and showed consistent effectiveness with additional polyfunctional and drug-like compounds.

Article Abstract

We reveal a universal relationship between molecular polarizability (a single-molecule property) and partial molar volume in water that is an ensemble property characterizing solute-solvent systems. Since both of these quantities are of the key importance to describe solvation behavior of dissolved molecular species in aqueous solutions, the obtained relationship should have a high impact in chemistry, pharmaceutical, and life sciences as well as in environments. We demonstrated that the obtained relationship between the partial molar volume in water and the molecular polarizability has in general a non-homogeneous character. We performed a detailed analysis of this relationship on a set of ~200 organic molecules from various chemical classes and revealed its fine well-organized structure. We found that this structure strongly depends on the chemical nature of the solutes and can be rationalized in terms of specific solute-solvent interactions. Efficiency and universality of the proposed approach was demonstrated on an external test set containing several dozens of polyfunctional and druglike molecules.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3672094DOI Listing

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