Steven
Abbott
ab,
Jonathan J.
Booth‡
c and
Seishi
Shimizu
*d
aSteven Abbott TCNF Ltd., 7 Elsmere Road, Ipswich, Suffolk IP1 3SZ, UK
bSchool of Mechanical Engineering, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
cSchool of Chemistry, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK
dYork Structural Biology Laboratory, Department of Chemistry, University of York, Heslington, York YO10 5DD, UK. E-mail: seishi.shimizu@york.ac.uk
First published on 14th December 2016
We all know that to enhance solubility using greener chemistry we should harness sound principles of molecular-based thermodynamics. The problem is that even for simple systems it can be hard to know how to use fundamental tools for formulation benefit, and for the more complex systems that we must often use, calculations required for molecular thermodynamics can often be quite involved. In this paper we show that a fundamental, assumption-free statistical thermodynamics approach, the Kirkwood–Buff theory, can be used in practical, complex aqueous systems to provide the insights we need to optimise formulations. The theory itself is not that difficult, but its implementation, which requires many steps of thermodynamic calculations, has up to now not been straightforward. Taking full advantage of an interactive approach, here we review what the Kirkwood–Buff theory can provide for formulators; we use the power of modern web browsers to provide open-source, user-friendly, responsive-design apps to do the hard work of data analysis, leaving formulators to focus on the interpretation of the results for their specific optimisation task. Indeed the apps are intended to be used by researchers and formulators for specific systems of interest to them.
Our concern here is with solubilizers that fall between these two extremes. Here there is a confusing mix of terminologies such as “hydrotrope”, “solvosurfactant”, “solubilizer”, “cosolvent” and even “pre-ouzo” formulations.6–11 Although such systems offer much promise, it is hard to formulate rationally because of the confusing terminology and the obscurity of the mechanisms by which solubility is increased.14–17 The confusion leads directly to a waste of intellectual and developmental resources, as well as sub-optimal formulations. The aim of this paper is to provide a set of practical tools to counter this wastefulness.
We can illustrate the problems through the use of three classical hydrotropes: urea,18 nicotinamide19 and sodium cumene sulfonate, SCS.20 In each case, the hydrotrope has little effect on solubility at low concentrations, then above a Minimum Hydrotrope Concentration (MHC)21 the solubility of the solute increases. Because of the striking analogy between the MHC and CMC it has been natural to say that the hydrotrope forms clusters within which the solute is soluble.6–10,21 With SCS, for example, which looks a little like a typical ionic surfactant, the temptation to accept the analogy is obvious. Another example, nicotinamide, is well-known to self-associate in water so the temptation persists.22 However, urea has no significant tendency to self-associate in water, so for urea at least, the analogy cannot be correct.23 As we shall see, the analogy is positively wrong.14–17
Another temptation has been to invoke the phrase “water structure” to suggest that the hydrotrope breaks up the structure, allowing the solute to dissolve.24,25 However, invoking the phrase seldom brings helpful formulation understanding and we shall show that water structure is thermodynamically irrelevant for hydrotrope solubilization.14–17
A final temptation was to think in terms of “complexes” between solute and hydrotrope.26,27 There are three obvious problems with this idea. The first is that the term “complex” brings images of stoichiometry and chemists’ inclinations to think in terms of specific interaction.15 The second is that there has seldom been convincing evidence for such complexes.15 The third is that no reasonable theory of complex formation could reproduce a typical hydrotrope solubility curve.14–17
By using a fundamental, assumption-free molecular (statistical) thermodynamics technique called the Kirkwood–Buff (KB) theory,28–36 the present authors were able to show conclusively that none of the above hypotheses had any merit.14–17 The structure of the water could be shown to change negligibly across the entire range of hydrotrope concentrations.14 The self-association of a hydrotrope (e.g. nicotinamide) could be shown unambiguously to reduce its capability to act as a hydrotrope, for the reason, obvious in hindsight, that any hydrotrope molecules that were self-associating were not associating with the solute.17 And the idea of a “complex” such as 1:1 or 2:1 was demonstrated to be unrealistic.15 Indeed, stoichiometric complexation, which assumes a strong, specific interaction, contradicts the weak, non-specific interactions that take place in aqueous hydrotrope solutions.14–17
Instead it was shown that on average the solute and hydrotrope were mutually attracted, reducing the overall free energy of the system.14–17 Interestingly, the MHC was shown to be due to solute-induced clustering of the hydrotrope – in other words, once a hydrotrope started to become associated with the solute, that attracted more hydrotrope molecules.16
By looking at different solutes, some patterns emerged. Nicotinamide was generally more likely to want to associate with aromatic solutes but sometimes urea (which was not especially associated to the solute) was the more effective hydrotrope because none of it was wasted in hydrotrope clusters.17
The numerical analysis of these effects (discussed properly below) requires a modest amount of algebraic analysis of some raw data. The necessary data are simple and basic:14–17
1. The solubility curve versus hydrotrope concentration (of course);
2. The density dependence of the aqueous hydrotrope solutions;
3. The vapour pressure (VP) or (equivalently) osmotic pressure of the hydrotrope solutions.
No complex experimental equipment is required (though it is possible to derive some of the data via SAXS/SANS after much effort and cost) and modern high throughput machines make it trivial to obtain the necessary data.
This means that the green formulator merely has to add a few rather routine measurements (density & VP) to their solubility measurements to get an assumption-free, fundamental thermodynamic analysis of all the relevant effects within their solubilization experiments. The community gains a universal tool for comparing/contrasting the effects of different hydrotropes on different solutes and once a sufficient body of data exists, the technique will allow prediction and optimization. As a community we can transition from rather vague (and often confusing) terms such as “hydrotrope” to a few fundamental thermodynamic numbers which describe what is really going on.
Fig. 1 A simple simulation of an RDF (gij(r)) and 4πr2[gij(r) − 1] as a function of intermolecular separation, r. |
The RDF between species i and j is designated gij(r), which is a function of the intermolecular separation, r. By integrating the gij(r) − 1 over the whole solution space (via the function 4πr2[gij(r) − 1] shown in the bottom part of Fig. 1) one obtains a number which would be 0 if the distribution were entirely average (no special interactions), positive for typical small molecules if the molecules have fairly strong interactions and negative for systems with unfavourable interactions.14–17,28–36 The values for systems of interest are readily found from the hydrotrope app discussed below. These numbers are called the Kirkwood–Buff Integrals (KBI) and the free energy of the system can be calculated on a rigorous, assumption-free basis from the KBI.14–17,28–36 For two components i and j the KBI is written as Gij. It is important to note that a positive (negative) KBI implies an increase (decrease) in the measured density of the solution, i.e. microscopic phenomena are reflected in macroscopic effects, as discussed below.
By definition, Gij = Gji so to completely specify the pair-wise interactions in a water (1), hydrotrope (2) and solute (u) system we need G11, G12, G1u, G22, G2u and Guu, though for the purposes of this paper the low concentration of the solute allows Guu to be ignored.14–17 These numbers change as the relative concentrations change so we get a full picture of how the pair-wise interactions vary as the relative proportions vary in the formulation. Crucially, the Gij values are numbers that make sense to a formulator. A large positive Gij can be imagined as a local clustering of the species j around i. The details of the clustering will be vague for two reasons. The first is that this is statistical thermodynamics so the clusters are statistical – we are not talking about complexes.14–17 The second is, regrettably, a fundamental downside of KB theory. It can be shown that many different RDFs can produce the same KBI. In other words, we have no knowledge from the KBI whether a large Gij is due to a very compact clustering within the first solvation shell or a very loose cluster in the first shell with a steadily decreasing longer-range interaction.28–36 This RDF problem also means that we have to do the experiments to get the data rather than rely simply on molecular dynamics simulations where it is trivially easy to calculate KBIs from the simulation but extremely hard to avoid small errors at long ranges which can cause massive changes to the calculated KBI values.37
A simple 2D pseudo-molecular dynamics app (based upon an interactive molecular dynamics programme by Schroeder38) allows the rapid development of an intuitive feel for RDFs and the resulting Gij values. The app is http://www.stevenabbott.co.uk/practical-solubility/rdf-demo.php and the screen shot (Fig. 2) gives some idea of the capabilities of the app.
Another advantage of KBIs is in their ability to rationalize the formulators’ general preference for smaller solvents to larger ones for dissolution. The KBI is the integral of the radius r from 0 to infinity of the RDF.28–36 As shown in Fig. 1, the RDF is exactly 0 in the early part of the integral because other molecules are excluded from the volume of whichever molecule we are taking to be the reference for our distribution. This means that larger molecules have a 0 value of an RDF for a longer distance than smaller ones.30–33 So, other things being equal, KBIs for larger molecules will always be smaller (more negative) than those for smaller molecules. And because KBIs are a measure of the strengths of interactions, larger molecules always start with a disadvantage. There are many ways to talk of this “excluded volume” effect and it is common to describe it in terms of entropy. But by thinking of it in terms of the KBI, an idea that can be slippery and confusing becomes concrete and intuitive.30–33 An app (http://www.stevenabbott.co.uk/practical-solubility/ev-demo.php, not shown) allows exploration of this effect by omitting all other confusing variables.
So two simple concepts, density and excluded volume are key to understanding many formulation issues, yet are used surprisingly little.
KBIs are directly related to activity coefficients, provided that density changes are also taken into account.14–17,28–37 Because this paper is deliberately app-based, the reader is urged to explore the relationship between activity coefficients, densities and molecular weights (which affect molar volumes and excluded volumes) by using http://www.stevenabbott.co.uk/practical-solubility/kbgs.php.
The default settings, shown in Fig. 3, use constant densities, identical molecular weights and (via pseudo Wilson parameters) a system with modestly large activity coefficients. The three KBI (G11, G12 and G22) are plotted across the mole fraction range of 0 to 1 and will quickly make intuitive sense as the relative activity coefficients are changed. By changing molecular weight, simple excluded volume effects become apparent, then by adding a polynomial density plot of any shape that seems of interest, i.e. adding the effects of internal interactions, the full system can be explored.
Fig. 3 KBIs derived directly from MWt, density and activity coefficient data. Extra parameters such as “excess numbers” are also calculated. |
The app introduces two other concepts. We know that a large positive Gij means attraction and a large negative value means repulsion.14–17 So the Gij of an ideal mix might be expected to equal 0. But excluded volume effects mean that ideal Gij are always negative. With some elementary arithmetic, by subtracting the ideal Gij from the real value, it is possible to calculate Nij the “excess number”, i.e. how many more molecules of j are around i than would be found in the ideal case. They give an indication of the scale of the influence of molecules on each other.14–17,30–32 If Nij = 2 that does not mean that there is a trimer, it just means that somewhere in the vicinity of i there are, on average, 2 more j than expected. Note that there are 4 excess numbers because although Gij = Gji, Nij ≠ Nji.14–17,30–32
(1) |
The derivative on the left-hand side is simply obtained from the curve of solubility versus hydrotrope concentration, with a large value implying a large increase in concentration.14–17,31,32 So, fundamental, assumption-free thermodynamics tells us that for a large increase in solubility we need a large difference between Gu2 and Gu1 and/or a small difference between G22 and G21. This already tells us that water structure, measured by G11 is irrelevant as it does not appear in the rigorous equation.14,17 It also says that self-clustering of the hydrotrope, G22 reduces the solubility by increasing the value of the denominator.14–17 We instinctively know that Gu1 is small because if it were large then without the help of the hydrotrope the solubility would be large. So, to increase solubility a large Gu2 is required – the hydrotrope and solute should show a strong positive interaction.14–17
All that remains for the formulator to have a deep understanding of any given system is to see how the various Gij values change over the concentration range of interest and then, to find optimum systems, compare and contrast how changes to the system change the key terms in the equation.
The equations for obtaining the various Gij data from the experimental data are not particularly complex and the procedure is not especially difficult. They are fully described in our previous papers.14–17 Nevertheless, most formulators, including the present authors, would struggle to get every detail correct and to avoid classic pitfalls in a plethora of unit conversions. The (open-source) KB-hydrotrope app, http://www.stevenabbott.co.uk/practical-solubility/kb-hydrotropes.php, does all the hard work (see ESI† for instructions on how to use it).
The app comes with 16 datasets created by the authors from raw data found in the literature, but users can readily load their own data. The user provides a simple tab-separated (or comma-separated) file containing the key data for the analysis:
1. Molar solubility of the solute versus molar concentration of the hydrotrope
2. Density values (g cc−1) for a series of molar hydrotrope concentrations
3. Osmolality versus molality for a series of hydrotrope concentrations (the same samples can be used for density measurements, but this is not a necessary requirement).
Outputs of the Gij values are visual (with mouse read-out), but a comprehensive data set is also provided within a text box. Via a copy/paste from this box into Excel, the user can analyse the data more deeply. This rather crude way of extracting data is a consequence of the natural security of HTML5/Javascript apps – they are not allowed to directly do anything to the user's file system or Clipboard.
As indicated in eqn (1) the example shown in the app, butyl acetate with urea as hydrotrope, the solubilisation is due to the high Gu2, peaking at (from the mouse readout) 2300 (all values in cc per mole). In this case, the low self-association of urea is shown by a G22 of −40. The comparative efficacies of sodium benzoate and sodium salicylate, and their root causes can equally be studied in the app and can be compared to published analyses.14 It is interesting to compare (easily done in the app, not shown here) the cases of p-aminobenzoic acid solubilised by urea and nicotinamide. With urea the Gu2 is relatively small, 760, and the same modest G22 of −40, but with nicotinamide Gu2 is higher 1450, but also with a significant G22 of 1200 which somewhat reduces its efficacy. As before, the app data can be compared to the published analysis.17
Again, the expectation is that from such analyses of many datasets the reasons for the success or failure of various solute/hydrotrope pairs will become apparent.
Another limitation is that the KB equations are not good at critical points of phase separation.28–38 So a ternary system that has regions of immiscibility can only give Gij numbers surrounding the phase boundaries. KB can probably handle the fascinating “pre-ouzo” region (which has attractive green solubilization potential) but certainly cannot handle the phase separation domain.8,11 Nevertheless, a good delineation of phase boundaries still provides a lot of key information that maps to a formulator's intuition.
In the present app, an alternative approach, which can describe the cooperative (sigmoidal) solubility increase, has also been implemented.41 This operative solubilisation theory attributes the sigmoidal solubility increase to the enhancement of n-body hydrotrope association when the solute comes into the solution.41 As can be demonstrated in the app featured in Fig. 4, the overall sigmoidal shape can be reproduced using only three parameters described in the reference, including n. This theory is approximate, and does not contain all the KBIs, but may be useful for an overall understanding of hydrotrope action.41
One of the many beautiful aspects of thermodynamics is that the same problem can be viewed from several different perspectives. Those who prefer to work with enthalpies and entropies (and the issue of entropy/enthalpy compensation) could, in principle, take the same experimental data and derive thermodynamic values that are equally valid. The problem is that there is no direct, rigorous and tractable link between solubility and solution structure from an entropy/enthalpy point of view,42–44 nor is there an appified version of such an approach that allows the formulator to easily gain a deep, intuitive understanding of what is going on. It would be very useful if such alternatives existed because the different ways of looking at the same problem can provide insights that neither approach on its own can give. For those who are interested in such aspects, it is indeed possible to go from KBIs to entropy/enthalpy values but the present authors have not provided this functionality in the apps.
What about prediction? As mentioned above, even with advanced molecular dynamics simulations it happens to be extremely difficult to go from computed RDFs to reliable KBIs.38 Even if this were possible, molecular dynamics will show the same complicated picture of multiple, statistical interactions that are somewhat stronger or weaker depending on the system. So prediction, as opposed to understanding, is currently not possible via the KB approach.
This is, to say the least, unfortunate. But the present authors believe that with a sufficient corpus of datasets, formulators will be able to generate rules of thumb or more sophisticated algorithms to provide the necessary prediction. Already it is possible to see why urea may or may not be a better hydrotrope than nicotinamide.17 For solutes where, by intuition, nicotinamide is not going to be strongly attracted to the solute, urea would tend to win because the rather large G22 value of nicotinamide gives it a significant disadvantage. With a proper KB analysis of the cases where SCS (or the similar sodium xylene sulfonate, SXS) are used on an industrial scale it should be possible to intuit why they are so successful in these specific applications, and to suggest alternatives for cases where they do not work.
For those who are comfortable with the algebra of statistical thermodynamics, the approach adopted here is described in rigorous detail in our previous papers.14–17 For those who are less comfortable, the KB theory itself can be explained via a series of apps that allow the formulator to build up an understanding of what the theory really means.
While the extraction of the KB parameters from experimental data requires a series of tedious calculations, a set of general-purpose, open source apps allows the green community to obtain the key KB values easily and reliably from their own experimental data. By being open source, the apps can be challenged, modified and developed collaboratively by the hydrotrope community.
Alternative app-based approaches via different, complementary thermodynamic methods would be welcomed. The present authors have chosen KB because it seems to handle these complex systems with a welcome clarity and precision and provides numbers (KBIs) that map onto chemists’ understanding of radial distribution functions. But clearly, other approaches have their own merits.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c6gc03002e |
‡ Present address: Croda Europe, Cowick Hall, Snaith, Goole, East Yorkshire, DN14 9AA, UK. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 |