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Water Depletion Enhanced by Halogenation of Benzene. | LitMetric

Water Depletion Enhanced by Halogenation of Benzene.

J Phys Chem B

Department of Physics, College of Humanities and Sciences, Nihon University, 3-25-40 Sakurajosui, Setagaya-Ku, Tokyo 156-8550, Japan.

Published: August 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The solubility of hydrophobic solutes in water is influenced by pressure and relates to volume changes during hydrophobic hydration, which are affected by differences in the van der Waals volume between the solute and water.
  • Studies showed that while benzene, fluorobenzene, and chlorobenzene had negative volume changes, bromobenzene and iodobenzene exhibited positive volume changes.
  • The findings indicate that the hydration behavior of bromobenzene and iodobenzene does not align with typical patterns for hydrophobic solutes, suggesting that their bulky bromine and iodine groups alter the hydration structure and cause increased water depletion around these solutes.

Article Abstract

The pressure dependence of the solubility of hydrophobic solutes in aqueous solutions is equivalent to volume changes upon hydrophobic hydration. This phenomenon has been attributed to the packing effects induced by the van der Waals volume difference between the solute and water. However, the volume changes may also be related to the chemical properties of the solute. In this study, we investigated hydrophobic hydration using a series of halogenated benzenes. Solution density measurements revealed negative volume changes for benzene, fluorobenzene, and chlorobenzene, whereas those for bromobenzene and iodobenzene were positive. Subsequent volumetric analyses demonstrated that the relationship between the excess particle number for hydration water and the van der Waals volume for bromobenzene and iodobenzene significantly deviated from the universal line for hydrophobic solutes. This behavior suggests that the volume changes are due to factors other than the packing effect with bromo and iodine functional groups acting as modulators of the hydration structure, resulting in enhanced water depletion.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.1c03187DOI Listing

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