Abstract

Hydrophobic bonding is a phenomenon wherein the adsorption of solutes from aqueous solutions is driven largely by the desire of solvent molecules to interact with each other, thus squeezing out solute molecules onto the adsorbent surface. A novel computational analysis of hydration shell water dynamics was used to study the driving force for the hydrophobic bonding of five small drug molecules to activated carbon. It was demonstrated that the solvation of these drug molecules produced hydration shells of lower density and molecular mobility than bulk water, up to 10.5–14 Å distance. Excellent correlations were found between the simulated water-water hydrogen bonding lifetimes in the hydration shell and the experimental capacity constants of hydrophobic bonding (KHB) obtained from the Two-Mechanism Langmuir-Like Equation. KHB also correlated well with the solute-solvent vdW interaction energies in a manner that could allow future predictions of KHB values from simple simulations. Such correlations were not found with the capacity constant of the well-known enthalpy-driven adsorption. The driving force for hydrophobic bonding has entropic origins due to the elimination of water structuring in the hydration shells. However, unlike a typical entropy-driven process, hydrophobic bonding to activated carbon was also associated with a large exothermic enthalpy change when studied with isoperibol calorimetry.

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