1 research outputs found
Raman Spectroscopy of Water–Ethanol Solutions: The Estimation of Hydrogen Bonding Energy and the Appearance of Clathrate-like Structures in Solutions
The
structure of aqueous alcohol solutions at the molecular level
for many decades has remained an intriguing topic in numerous theoretical
and practical investigations. The aberrant thermodynamic properties
of water–alcohol mixtures are believed to be caused by the
differences in energy of hydrogen bonding between water–water,
alcohol–alcohol, and alcohol–water molecules. We present
the Raman scattering spectra of water, ethanol, and water–ethanol
solutions with 20 and 70 vol % of ethanol thoroughly measured and
analyzed at temperatures varying from −10 to +70 °C. Application
of the MCR-ALS method allowed for each spectrum to extract contributions
of molecules with different strengths of hydrogen bonding. The energy
(enthalpy) of formation/weakening of hydrogen bonds was calculated
using the slope of Van’t Hoff plot. The energy of hydrogen
bonding in 20 vol % of ethanol was found the highest among all the
samples. This finding further supports appearance of clathrate-like
structures in water–ethanol solutions with concentrations around
20 vol % of ethanol