hydrophile
Hydrophile, from the Greek (hydros) "water" and φιλια (philia) "friendship," refers to a physical property of a molecule that can transiently bond with water (H2O) through hydrogen bonding. This is thermodynamically favorable, and makes these molecules soluble not only in water, but also in other polar solvents. There are hydrophilic and hydrophobic parts of the cell membrane.
A hydrophilic molecule or portion of a molecule is one that is typically charge-polarized and capable of hydrogen bonding, enabling it to dissolve more readily in water than in oil or other hydrophobic solvents. Hydrophilic and hydrophobic molecules are also known as polar molecules and nonpolar molecules, respectively. Some hydrophilic substances don't dissolve. This type of mixture is called a colloid. Soap has a hydrophilic head and a hydrophobic tail which allows it to dissolve in both waters and oils, therefore allowing the soap to clean a surface.
See also
| Articles related to solutions | |
|---|---|
| Solution | Ideal solution • Aqueous solution • Solid solution • Flory-Huggins • Mixture • Suspension (chemistry) • Colloid • Phase diagram • Eutectic point • Alloy |
| Concentration | Saturation (chemistry) • Supersaturation • Molar solution • Percentage solution |
| Solubility | Solubility equilibrium • Total dissolved solids • Solvation • Solvation shell • Enthalpy change of solution • Lattice energy • Raoult's law • Henry's law • Solubility table (data) • Solubility chart |
| Solvent | (category) •
Acid dissociation constant • Protic
solvent • Inorganic nonaqueous solvent • Solvation • List of boiling and
freezing information of solvents Partition coefficient • Polarity • Hydrophobe • Hydrophile • Lipophilic • Amphiphile |
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