Literature DB >> 13129378

Identity proton-transfer reactions from C-H, N-H, and O-H acids. An ab initio, DFT, and CPCM-B3LYP aqueous solvent model study.

James R Keeffe1, Scott Gronert, Michael E Colvin, Ngoc L Tran.   

Abstract

Identity proton-transfer reactions between 21 acids, Y-X-H, and their conjugate bases, (-)X-Y, were studied according to the reaction scheme, Y-X-H + (-)X-Y --> (Y-X-H...(-)X-Y)(cx) --> [Y-X...H...X-Y](ts) --> (Y-X..H-X-Y)(cx) --> Y-X(-) + H-X-Y, where cx indicates an ion-molecule complex and ts indicates the proton-transfer transition state. All species were optimized at the MP2/6-311+G level, and these geometries were used for single-point calculations by other methods: coupled-cluster, DFT (gas phase), and a polarizable continuum aqueous solvent model (COSMO). All methods gave enthalpies of deprotonation which correlate well with experimental measurements of deltaH(ACID) (gas) or pK(a) (aq). Calculated gas-phase enthalpies of deprotonation (deltaH(ACID)) and enthalpies of activation (deltaH(#)) are poorly correlated except for small, carefully selected sets. This result stands in contrast to the many aqueous phase Brönsted correlations of kinetic and equilibrium acid strength. On the other hand, gas-phase enthalpies of complexation and deltaH(#) are well correlated, indicating that factors which stabilize the transition state are at work in the bimolecular ion-molecule complex although to a smaller degree. We infer that intermoiety electrostatic and other interactions, similar within the complex and the transition state, but absent in the separated reactants (products), cause the lack of correlation between deltaH(ACID) and the other two quantities. Such differences are strongly attenuated in water because reactants and products do interact with polar/polarizable matter (the solvent) if not with each other. Charge distributions (NPA) were computed, allowing calculation of Bernasconi's "transition state imbalance parameter". Such measures provide intuitively satisfactory trends, but only if the reaction termini, X, are kept the same. As X is made more electronegative, the magnitude of the apparent imbalance increases, a result of greater negative charge on X in the transition state. This result gives additional support for the importance of the ion-triplet structure, [YX(-)...H(+)...(-)XY], to the stability of the transition state. Additional qualitative support for this conclusion is provided by the inverse relationship between the activation barrier and the charge on the in-flight hydrogen in the transition state, and by the dominance of polar over resonance substituent effects on the stability of the transition state. Calculations also show that the "nitroalkane anomaly", well established in solution, does not exist in the gas phase. The COSMO model partly reproduces this anomaly and performs adequately except when strong, specific intermolecular forces such as hydrogen bonding between solvent and anions are important.

Entities:  

Year:  2003        PMID: 13129378     DOI: 10.1021/ja0356683

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  3 in total

1.  Gas phase reactions of 1,3,5-triazine: proton transfer, hydride transfer, and anionic σ-adduct formation.

Authors:  John M Garver; Zhibo Yang; Shuji Kato; Scott W Wren; Kristen M Vogelhuber; W Carl Lineberger; Veronica M Bierbaum
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2011-04-19       Impact factor: 3.109

2.  The element effect revisited: factors determining leaving group ability in activated nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions.

Authors:  Nicholas A Senger; Bo Bo; Qian Cheng; James R Keeffe; Scott Gronert; Weiming Wu
Journal:  J Org Chem       Date:  2012-10-17       Impact factor: 4.354

3.  Effect of allylic groups on S(N)2 reactivity.

Authors:  Ihsan Erden; Scott Gronert; James R Keeffe; Jingxiang Ma; Nuket Ocal; Christian Gärtner; Leah L Soukup
Journal:  J Org Chem       Date:  2014-07-07       Impact factor: 4.354

  3 in total

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