The research described in this product was performed in part in the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, a national scientific user facility sponsored by the Department of Energy's Office of Biological and Environmental Research and located at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
A molecular-level description of the behavior of water in hydrophobic spaces is presented in
terms of the coupled effects of solute size and atomic solute-solvent interactions. For model solutes with
surface areas near those of protein contacts, we identify three different regions of solute-water interaction
to be associated with three distinctly different structural characteristics of water in the intersolute region:
dry, oscillating, and wet. A first orderlike phase transition is confirmed from the wet to dry state bridged by
a narrow region with liquid-vapor oscillations in the intersolute region as the strength of the solute-water
attractive dispersion interaction decreases. We demonstrate that the recent idea that cavitation in the
intersolute region of nanoscopic solutes is preceded by the formation of a vapor layer around an individual
solute is not the general case. The appearance of density waves pulled up around and outside of a
nanoscopic plate occurs at lower interaction strengths than are required to obtain a wet state between
such plates. We further show that chemically reasonable estimates of the interaction strength lead to a
microscopically wet state and a hydrophobic interaction characterized by traps and barriers to association
and not by vacuum induced collapse.
Revised: April 7, 2011 |
Published: March 27, 2007
Citation
Choudhury N., and B.M. Pettitt. 2007.The Dewetting Transition and The Hydrophobic Effect.Journal of the American Chemical Society 129, no. 15:4847-4852. doi:10.1021/ja069242a