Dictionary Definition
hydrophobic adj
1 lacking affinity for water; tending to repel
and not absorb water; tending not to dissolve in or mix with or be
wetted by water [ant: hydrophilic]
2 abnormally afraid of water [syn: aquaphobic]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
Antonyms
- hydrophilic (1)
Extensive Definition
otheruses Hydrophobia In
chemistry,
hydrophobicity (from the combining form of water in Attic Greek
hydro- and for fear phobos) refers to the physical property of a
molecule (known as a
hydrophobe) that is repelled from a mass of water .
Hydrophobic molecules tend to be non-polar and
thus prefer other neutral molecules and nonpolar solvents. Hydrophobic molecules
in water often cluster together forming micelles. Water on hydrophobic
surfaces will exhibit a high contact
angle.
Examples of hydrophobic molecules include the alkanes, oils, fats, and greasy substances in
general. Hydrophobic materials are used for oil removal from water,
the management of oil spills, and chemical separation processes to
remove non-polar from polar compounds.
Hydrophobic is often used interchangeably with
lipophilic, "fat
loving." However, the two terms are not synonymous. While
hydrophobic substances are usually lipophilic, there are exceptions
— the silicones, for
instance.
Chemical background
According to thermodynamics, matter
seeks to be in a low-energy state, and bonding reduces chemical
energy. Water is electrically polarized, and is able to form
hydrogen
bonds internally, which gives it many of its unique physical
properties. But, since hydrophobes are not electrically polarized,
and because they are unable to form hydrogen bonds, water repels
hydrophobes, in favour of bonding with itself. It is this effect
that causes the hydrophobic interaction — which in itself is
incorrectly named as the energetic force comes from the hydrophilic molecules. Thus
the two immiscible phases (hydrophilic vs. hydrophobic) will change
so that their corresponding interfacial area will be minimal. This
effect can be visualized in the phenomenon called phase
separation.
Superhydrophobicity
Superhydrophobic materials have surfaces that are
extremely difficult to wet with water contact
angles in excess of 150°. Many of these very hydrophobic
materials found in nature rely on Cassie's law
and are biphasic on the
submicrometer level with one component air. The Lotus effect
is based on this principle. An example of a biomimetic superhydrophobic
material in nanotechnology is
nanopin
film. In one study a vanadium
pentoxide surface is presented that can switch reversibly
between superhydrophobicity and superhydrophilicity
under the influence of UV radiation. According to the study any
surface can be modified to this effect by application of a suspension
of rose-like V2O5 particles for instance with an inkjet
printer. Once again hydrophobicity is induced by interlaminar
air pockets (separated by 2.1 nm distances). The UV effect
is also explained. UV light creates electron-hole
pairs, with the holes reacting with lattice oxygen creating
surface oxygen vacancies while the electrons reduce V5+ to V3+. The
oxygen vacancies are met by water and this water absorbency by the
vanadium surface makes it hydrophilic. By extended storage in the
dark, water is replaced by oxygen and hydrophilicity is once
again lost.
References
External links
hydrophobic in German: Hydrophobie
(Chemie)
hydrophobic in French: Hydrophobe
hydrophobic in Italian: Idrofobia
hydrophobic in Hebrew: הידרופוביות
hydrophobic in Lithuanian: Hidrofobiškumas
hydrophobic in Dutch: Hydrofoob
hydrophobic in Japanese: 疎水性
hydrophobic in Polish: Hydrofobowość
hydrophobic in Portuguese: Hidrofóbica
hydrophobic in Finnish: Hydrofobinen
hydrophobic in Swedish: Hydrofob
hydrophobic in Chinese: 疏水性