Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.110, No.31, 15442-15453, 2006
Water-hydrocarbon interfaces: Effect of hydrocarbon branching on interfacial structure
Molecular dynamics simulation are performed for the water/hydrocarbon system to study the effect of hydrocarbon branching on interfacial properties. The following two series of hydrocarbons are considered: (1) n-pentane, 2-methylpentane, and 2,2,4-trimethyl pentane (constant chain length) and (2) n-octane, 2-methyl heptane, and 2,2,4-trimethyl pentane (constant molecular mass). With a simple algorithm for identification of surface sites and mapping nonsurface sites to these surface sites, intrinsic profiles were constructed with respect to the surface layer. Intrinsic density profiles for water and hydrocarbons with respect to the hydrocarbon and water surface, respectively, resemble density profiles of liquids in the presence of a wall. Order parameters were used to study orientation of molecules with respect to the surface normal and the hydrogen bond network was characterized in terms of the number of hydrogen bonds per water molecule and percentage of hydrogen bonded molecules in the first coordination shell. The corresponding intrinsic profiles were obtained. The O-H bond for surface water was found to have two preferential orientations, pointing toward the hydrocarbon phase and parallel to the interface. Hydrocarbon molecules in series 1 orient along the interface with the more branched molecule better aligned. For molecules in series 2, the larger molecular length reduces the alignment of molecules along the interface.