Heat capacity effects associated with the hydrophobic hydration and interaction of simple solutes: a detailed structural and energetical analysis based on molecular dynamics simulations

J Chem Phys. 2004 Jun 8;120(22):10605-17. doi: 10.1063/1.1737294.

Abstract

We examine the SPCE [H. J. C. Berendsen et al., J. Chem. Phys. 91, 6269 (1987)] and TIP5P [M. W. Mahoney and W. L. Jorgensen, J. Chem. Phys 112, 8910 (2000)] water models using a temperature series of molecular-dynamics simulations in order to study heat-capacity effects associated with the hydrophobic hydration and interaction of xenon particles. The temperature interval between 275 and 375 K along the 0.1-MPa isobar is studied. For all investigated models and state points we calculate the excess chemical potential for xenon employing the Widom particle insertion technique. The solvation enthalpy and excess heat capacity is obtained from the temperature dependence of the chemical potentials and, alternatively, directly by Ewald summation, as well as a reaction field based method. All three methods provide consistent results. In addition, the reaction field technique allows a separation of the solvation enthalpy into solute/solvent and solvent/solvent parts. We find that the solvent/solvent contribution to the excess heat capacity is dominating, being about one order of magnitude larger than the solute/solvent part. This observation is attributed to the enlarged heat capacity of the water molecules in the hydration shell. A detailed spatial analysis of the heat capacity of the water molecules around a pair of xenon particles at different separations reveals that even more enhanced heat capacity of the water located in the bisector plane between two adjacent xenon atoms is responsible for the maximum of the heat capacity found for the desolvation barrier distance, recently reported by Shimizu and Chan [J. Am. Chem. Soc. 123, 2083 (2001)]. The about 60% enlarged heat capacity of water in the concave part of the joint xenon-xenon hydration shell is the result of a counterplay of strengthened hydrogen bonds and an enhanced breaking of hydrogen bonds with increasing temperature. Differences between the two models with respect to the heat capacity in the xenon-xenon contact state are attributed to the different water model bulk heat capacities, and to the different spatial extension of the structure effect introduced by the hydrophobic particles. Similarities between the different states of water in the joint xenon-xenon hydration shell and the properties of stretched water are discussed.