Abstract

Structural changes induced by water play a pivotal role in chemistry and biology but remain challenging to predict, measure, and control at molecular level. Here we explore size‐governed gas‐phase water aggregation in the flexible molecule 4‐hydroxy‐2‐butanone, modeling the conformational adaptability of flexible substrates to host water scaffolds and the preference for sequential droplet growth. The experiment was conducted using broadband rotational spectroscopy, rationalized with quantum chemical calculations. Two different isomers were observed experimentally from the di‐ to the pentahydrates (4‐hydroxy‐2‐butanone‐(water)n = 2‐5), including the 18O isotopologues for the di‐ and trihydrates. Interestingly, to accommodate water molecules effectively, the heavy atom skeleton of 4‐hydroxy‐2‐butanone reshapes in every observed isomer and does not correspond to the stable conformer of the free monomer. All solvates initiate from the (proton donor) alcohol group but retain the carbonyl group as secondary binding point. The water scaffolds closely resemble those found in the pure water clusters, balancing between the capability of 4‐hydroxy‐2‐butanone for steering the orientation and position of the water molecules and the ability of water to modulate the monomer's conformation. The present work thus provides an accurate molecular answer on how torsionally flexible molecules dynamically adapt to water along progressing solvation.

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