Effect of a Tertiary Butyl Group on Polar Solvation Dynamics in Aqueous Solution: A Computational Approach
Esther Heid, Christian Schr\"oder

TL;DR
This computational study explores how adding a tertiary butyl group to a molecular probe affects water's solvation dynamics, revealing that solute vibrations significantly influence the observed retardation, challenging previous assumptions.
Contribution
It demonstrates that solute vibrations, not just solvent properties, play a key role in solvation dynamics, even in water, and shows the impact of hydrophobic groups on these processes.
Findings
Vibration modes mainly cause solvation retardation.
Hydrophobic side chains influence solvation dynamics.
Rotation has minimal effect on hydration behavior.
Abstract
The current computational study investigates the changes in solvation dynamics of water when introducing hydrophobic side chains to the molecular probe N-methyl-6-oxyquinolinium betaine. High precision transient fluorescence and absorption measurements published in the companion paper revealed an influence of hydrophobic sidechain alterations on the observed solvation dynamics of a chromophore in water. As the influence of shape, size and structure of chromophores on the time-dependent Stokes shift was so far thought to play a role only in slowly rotating solvents compared to the solute or if the hydrogen bonding ability of the solute changes, this finding is quite unexpected. Analysis of the time-dependent Stokes shift obtained from nonequilibrium simulations corroborates experimental retardation factors and activation energies, and indicates that solute motion, namely vibration, is…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
