A theoretical approach is developed to quantify hydrophobic hydration and interactions on a molecular scale, with the goal of insight into the molecular origins of hydrophobic effects. The model is based on the fundamental relation between the probability for cavity formation in bulk water resulting from molecular-scale density fluctuations and the hydration free energy of the simplest hydrophobic solutes, hard particles. This probability is estimated using an information theory (IT) approach, incorporating experimentally available properties of bulk water: the density and radial distribution function. The IT approach reproduces the simplest hydrophobic effects: hydration of spherical nonpolar solutes, the potential of mean force (PMF) be...
The roles of hydrogen bonding and the hard core of water on hydrophobic hydration are clarified usin...
Cold and pressure denaturation are believed to have their molecular origin in hydrophobic interactio...
Two main physical explanations of hydrophobicity seem to be currently competing. The classical, intu...
Recent breakthroughs in the theory of hydrophobic effects permit new analyses of several characteris...
Hydrophobic interactions guide important molecular self-assembly processes such as protein folding. ...
Hydrophobic interactions guide important molecular self-assembly processes such as protein folding. ...
Molecular statistical thermodynamic models of hydration for chemistry and biophysics have advanced a...
Hydrophobicity is of central importance to many branches of chemistry, ranging from the low aqueous ...
Proteins can be denatured by pressures of a few hundred MPa. This finding apparently contradicts the...
AbstractWe revisit a heteropolymer collapse theory originally introduced to explore how the balance ...
An information theory model is used to construct a molecular explanation why hydrophobic solvation e...
A molecular model of poorly understood hydrophobic effects is heuristically developed using the meth...
An information theory model is used to construct a molecular explanation why hydrophobic solvation e...
AbstractWe revisit a heteropolymer collapse theory originally introduced to explore how the balance ...
The aversion of hydrophobic solutes for water drives diverse interactions and assemblies across mate...
The roles of hydrogen bonding and the hard core of water on hydrophobic hydration are clarified usin...
Cold and pressure denaturation are believed to have their molecular origin in hydrophobic interactio...
Two main physical explanations of hydrophobicity seem to be currently competing. The classical, intu...
Recent breakthroughs in the theory of hydrophobic effects permit new analyses of several characteris...
Hydrophobic interactions guide important molecular self-assembly processes such as protein folding. ...
Hydrophobic interactions guide important molecular self-assembly processes such as protein folding. ...
Molecular statistical thermodynamic models of hydration for chemistry and biophysics have advanced a...
Hydrophobicity is of central importance to many branches of chemistry, ranging from the low aqueous ...
Proteins can be denatured by pressures of a few hundred MPa. This finding apparently contradicts the...
AbstractWe revisit a heteropolymer collapse theory originally introduced to explore how the balance ...
An information theory model is used to construct a molecular explanation why hydrophobic solvation e...
A molecular model of poorly understood hydrophobic effects is heuristically developed using the meth...
An information theory model is used to construct a molecular explanation why hydrophobic solvation e...
AbstractWe revisit a heteropolymer collapse theory originally introduced to explore how the balance ...
The aversion of hydrophobic solutes for water drives diverse interactions and assemblies across mate...
The roles of hydrogen bonding and the hard core of water on hydrophobic hydration are clarified usin...
Cold and pressure denaturation are believed to have their molecular origin in hydrophobic interactio...
Two main physical explanations of hydrophobicity seem to be currently competing. The classical, intu...