Issue 32, 2011

Enthalpy–entropy correlations as chemical guides to unravel self-assembly processes

Abstract

Intermolecular connections play a crucial role in biology (recognition, signalling, binding), in physics (material cohesion) and in chemistry ((supra)molecular engineering). While a phenomenological thermodynamic free-energy approach for modelling self-assemblies is now at hand, a more satisfying description based on the chemically-intuitive enthalpic and entropic contributions remains elusive. On the other hand, the innumerable reports of empirical enthalpy/entropy correlations characterizing intermolecular interactions justify a questioning about the emergence and exploitation of an apparent ‘fourth law of thermodynamics’, which could provide a simple manipulation of intermolecular binding processes. This tutorial Perspective aims at highlighting the current level of non-quantum rationalization of enthalpy–entropy correlations and their chemical consequences on the tuning and on the programming of intermolecular interactions in pure materials, and in diluted solutions.

Graphical abstract: Enthalpy–entropy correlations as chemical guides to unravel self-assembly processes

Article information

Article type
Perspective
Submitted
12 Jan 2011
Accepted
12 Apr 2011
First published
01 Jun 2011

Dalton Trans., 2011,40, 8059-8071

Enthalpy–entropy correlations as chemical guides to unravel self-assembly processes

C. Piguet, Dalton Trans., 2011, 40, 8059 DOI: 10.1039/C1DT10055F

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