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Molecular group surface area approach

MSGA.molecular and group surface area approach... [Pg.24]

Traube s rule accommodates the balance between hydrophobicity and hydro-philicity. It has been extended somewhat and formalized with the development of quantitative methods to estimate the surface area of molecules based on their structures [19, 237]. The molecular surface area approach suggests that the number of water molecules that can be packed around the solute molecule plays an important role in the theoretical calculation of the thermodynamic properties of the solution. Hence, the molecular surface area of the solute is an important parameter in the theory. In compounds other than simple normal alkanes, the functional groups will tend to be more or less polar and thus relatively compatible with the polar water matrix [227,240]. Hence, the total surface area of the molecule can be subdivided into functional group surface area and hydro carbonaceous surface area . These quantities maybe determined for simple compounds as an additive function of constituent groups with subtractions made for the areas where intramolecular contact is made and thus no external surface is presented. [Pg.142]

In solvent systems where polar interactions exert a major role, the molecular and group-surface-area (MGSA) approach provides a better quality solubility prediction (Yalkowsky et al., 1972, 1976 Amidon et al., 1974, 1975). Instead of... [Pg.13]

Given the somewhat ad hoc nature of most specific schemes for evaluating the non-electrostatic components of the solvation free energy, a reliance on a simpler, if somewhat more empirical, scheme has become widely accepted within available continuum models. In essence, the more empirical approach assumes that the free energy associated with the non-electrostatic solvation of any atom will be characteristic for that atom (or group) and proportional to its solvent-exposed surface area. Thus, the molecular Geos may be computed simply as... [Pg.407]


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Molecular approach

Molecular surface

Molecular surface area)

Surface approach

Surface approaching

Surface area groups

Surface groupings

Surface groups

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