Effect of PEG Chain Length on the Water Solubility of Monodisperse PEG-Appended Molecules

03 January 2026, Version 1
This content is an early or alternative research output and has not been peer-reviewed by Cambridge University Press at the time of posting.

Abstract

Polyethylene glycol (PEG) is a nonionic and highly water-soluble polymer, and PEGylation is widely used as a versatile chemical strategy to enhance the water solubility of otherwise poorly soluble molecules. The rational design of PEG-appended materials, therefore, requires an estimation of the PEG chain length necessary to achieve the desired level of solubility. Here, we investigated the relationship between the PEG chain length and the water solubility of PEG-appended molecules using a combination of experimental and computational approaches. We focused on monodisperse PEG with a discrete molecular weight, which enables us to identify the relationship between chain length and physicochemical properties, as represented by water solubility. Then, we designed a series of PEG‑appended molecules bearing monodisperse PEG chains of varying lengths, and measured their water solubilities experimentally. In parallel, molecular dynamics-based alchemical free‑energy calculations yielded thermodynamic trends that reproduced the observed dependence of solubility on PEG chain length. Comparison of experimental and computational results showed that the calculations not only distinguished between water-soluble and insoluble PEG-appended molecules but also captured the solubility trends for moderately soluble species. These findings demonstrate the potential of molecular-dynamics-based free-energy calculations for a priori prediction of the water solubility of PEG-appended molecules.

Keywords

Polyethylene glycol
Water solubility
Free energy calculation
Molecular dynamics simulation
Hydration water

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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1H and 13C NMR spectra of PyPEG(8), PyPEG(12), PyPEG(16), NaphPEG(8), p-terPhPEG(8), and p-terPhPEG(12) (Figures S1–S6); high-resolution ESI-TOF mass spectra of PyPEG(8), PyPEG(12), PyPEG(16), NaphPEG(8), p-terPhPEG(8), and p-terPhPEG(12) (Figures S7–S12); calibration curves used to experimentally evaluate the water solubilities of PyPEG(4), NaphPEG(4), p-terPhPEG(8), and p-terPhPEG(12) (Figure S13); results of MD-based free energy calculations (Table S1); fitting equations for THz-TDS study (Eq. S1, Eq. S2); parameters obtained by fitting the THz-TDS results (Table S2).
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