Mikael Lund
Professor
The mechanism of cellulose solubilization by urea studied by molecular simulation
Author
Summary, in English
We used molecular dynamics simulation to model the effect of urea and thiourea on the solvent quality of aqueous solutions with respect to cellulose. A model system consisting of a periodically replicated cellulose molecule of effectively infinite degree of polymerization immersed in aqueous (thio-)urea solution was considered. Kirkwood-Buff theory, which relates the pair distribution functions to the concentration derivatives of the chemical potential, allowed the solubilization effect to be quantified in terms of the preferential binding of urea over water to the cellulose molecule. We found that urea is preferentially adsorbed on the hydrophobic faces of the anhydroglucose rings but has the same affinity as water to the hydroxyl groups. Thus, the simulations suggest that urea acts primarily by mitigating the effect of the hydrophobic portions of the cellulose molecule.
Department/s
- Physical Chemistry
- Computational Chemistry
- eSSENCE: The e-Science Collaboration
Publishing year
2015
Language
English
Pages
991-1001
Publication/Series
Cellulose
Volume
22
Issue
2
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Springer
Topic
- Theoretical Chemistry (including Computational Chemistry)
- Physical Chemistry (including Surface- and Colloid Chemistry)
Keywords
- Solubilization
- Urea
- Thiourea
- Molecular dynamics
- Kirkwood-Buff theory
Status
Published
Project
- Electric interactions: A study of cellulose
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0969-0239