Dimethyl sulfoxide, dimethyl sulfone, dimethyl sulfate, methyl
acetate and acetic acid are studied, as solutes, in
methanol–acetonitrile mixed solvent, using IR spectroscopy and
calorimetry. IR measurements are also reported in a wider range of
single-component solvents. It is shown that the S
![[double bond, length as m-dash]](https://www.rsc.org/images/entities/char_e001.gif)
O stretching
band of the three solutes varies linearly with Reichardt's
E
T
for the single-component solvents, with the
variation being largest for dimethyl sulfoxide and smallest for
dimethyl sulfate, in line with the basicities of the solutes. Analysis
of the data in the mixed solvent systems shows that dimethyl sulfoxide
and acetic acid are preferentially solvated by methanol while the
others show random or slight preferential solvation by acetonitrile.
Similarly, dimethyl sulfoxide and acetic acid, interact significantly
more strongly with methanol than with acetonitrile, while the other
solutes show relatively little difference in the strengths of their
interactions with methanol and acetonitrile. It is also found that the
solvation of dimethyl sulfoxide and acetic acid involves greater
disruption of the solvent structure than those of the other solutes.
Comparison of the calorimetric and IR results supports the view that,
in these non-aqueous solvent systems, the solvation parameters
recovered from analysis of the calorimetric data principally reflect
the solvation of the polar functional groups.