Abstract
Understanding the delicate interplay between hydrophobicity/hydrophilicity, hydrogen bonding ability and solute size in modulating the chemico-physical properties of aqueous solutions with increasing solute concentration is a challenging task. Here, we focus on how bulk properties, such as diffusion and aggregation behaviour, are affected by the different hydration patterns observed for differently concentrated aqueous solutions of (poly)ethylene glycols, and their corresponding methoxyethers, of various lengths. Using a combined experimental and computational approach, we analyse solutions of ethylene glycol (EG), dimethoxyethane (DME), polyethylene glycol with 4 repeating units capped with either hydroxyl (PEG200) or methoxyl (PEG250DME) tails, and polyethylene glycol with 9 repeating units (PEG400). By disentangling the contributions of hydrophobicity, hydrogen bonding ability, and chain length, we observe that for the smaller solutes electristriction and hydrophobic hydration are the main phenomena occurring. Instead, as the solute becomes larger, these effects give way to the non-trivial conformational flexibility that can either favour or disfavour intermolecular interactions which lead to the formation of water-rich regions excluded from the solute.
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