화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.120, No.8, 2033-2042, 2016
Understanding n-Octane Behavior near Graphene with Scaled Solvent-Solute Attractions
We employ molecular dynamics simulations of n-octane near a layered graphene surface to study the related phenomena of solvation, density fluctuations, wettability, and structure and dynamics of n-octane molecules in the inhorriogeneous interfacial environment. That solvation in bulk n-octane displays a lengthscale-dependent crossover similar to that of hydrophobic solvation in water is known. Here we show that, near an extended graphene interface having attractive interactions with n-octane, lengthscale-dependent solvation is similar to that in the bulk and-displays a small to large crossover. However, as the n-octane graphene interactions are reduced to make the surface increasingly solvophobic, the crossover behavior is modulated and essentially absent near the most solvophobic surfaces, similar to that in water near hydrophobic interfaces. We show that the macroscopic measure of wettability, namely, the contact angle, characterizes n-octane graphene coupling over a limited range of attractions. In contrast, molecular measures such as the free energy of cavity formation or the local compressibility in the interfacial region provide an effective measure of this oupling over a broader range of attractions. Finally, as n-octane graphene attractions are increased, the n-octane liquid displays a wetting transition and corresponding change from sigmoidal to layered density profile. Analysis of the local structure shows that n-octane molecules prefer approximately linear conformations and surface-parallel orientations near the graphene surface, and-their translational dynamics slow down with increasing n-octane graphene attractions. Our study highlights molecular scale behavior of n-octane molecules that is relevant to understanding nanoparticle solvent coupling in composite materials with enhanced mechanical or thermal properties.