ABSTRACT
We present a rotational-computational investigation of the aromatic mercaptan 2-phenylethanethiol, addressing its potential energy surface, conformational equilibrium, internal dynamics and intramolecular interactions. The experiment used broadband chirped-pulse Fourier transform microwave spectroscopy in a supersonic jet expansion, recording the rotational spectrum in the 2-8â GHz frequency region. Two different conformers were detected in the spectrum. The most intense transitions correspond to a skew (gauche-gauche) conformation, identified as the global minimum. The spectra of ten different isotopologues were assigned for this species, leading to accurate effective and substitution structures. The weaker spectrum presents small tunnelling doublings caused by the torsional motion of the thiol group, which are only compatible with an antiperiplanar skeleton and a gauche thiol. The larger stability of the global minimum is attributed to an intramolecular S-Hâ â â π weak hydrogen bond. A comparison of the intramolecular interactions in the title molecule and 2-phenylethanol, similarly stabilized by a O-Hâ â â π hydrogen bond, shows the different strength of these interactions. Density functional (B3LYP-D3, B2PLYP-D3) and ab initio (MP2) calculations were conducted for the molecule.
ABSTRACT
π-Stacking is a common descriptor for face-to-face attractive forces between aromatic hydrocarbons. However, the physical origin of this interaction remains debatable. Here we examined π-stacking in a model homodimer formed by two thiol-substituted naphthalene rings. Two isomers of the 2-naphthalenethiol dimer were discovered using rotational spectroscopy, sharing a parallel-displaced crossed orientation and absence of thiol-thiol hydrogen bonds. One of the isomers presents C2 symmetry, structurally analogous to the global minimum of the naphthalene dimer. The experimental data were rationalized with molecular orbital calculations, revealing a shallow potential energy surface. Noncovalent interactions are dominated by dispersion forces according to SAPT energy decomposition. In addition, the reduced electronic density shows a diffuse and extended region of inter-ring interactions, compatible with the description of π-stacking as a competition between dispersion and Pauli repulsion forces.
ABSTRACT
Chirality is determinant for sphingosine biofunctions and pharmacological activity, yet the reasons for the biological chiral selection are not well understood. Here, we characterized the intra- and intermolecular interactions at the headgroup of the cytotoxic anhydrophytosphingosine jaspine B, revealing chirality-dependent correlations between the puckering of the ring core and the formation of amino-alcohol hydrogen bond networks, both in the monomer and the monohydrate. Following the specific synthesis of a shortened 3-carbon side-chain molecule, denoted jaspine B3, six different isomers were observed in a jet expansion using broadband (chirped-pulsed) rotational spectroscopy. Additionally, a single isomer of the jaspine B3 monohydrate was observed, revealing the insertion of water in between the hydroxy and amino groups and the formation of a network of O-H···N-H···Oring hydrogen bonds. The specific jaspine B3 stereochemistry thus creates a double-faced molecule where the exposed lone-pair electrons may easily catalyze the formation of intermolecular aggregates and determine the sphingosine biological properties.
Subject(s)
Antineoplastic Agents , Sphingosine , Hydrogen Bonding , Isomerism , Spectrum AnalysisABSTRACT
The monohydrates of thenyl alcohol and thenyl mercaptan have been probed in a supersonic jet expansion using chirped-pulse and Fabry-Perot Fourier-transform microwave spectroscopy. The rotational spectra revealed a single isomer for each of the dimers. The thenyl alcohol hydrate is stabilized by an O-HOw hydrogen bond between the alcohol and water, with water acting as a proton acceptor and additionally engaging in an Ow-Hπ interaction with the thenyl ring. Conversely, water behaves as a proton donor in the thenyl mercaptan hydrate, linking to the thiol group though an Ow-HS hydrogen bond and secondary Ow-Hπ interactions with the ring. In both dimers water retains internal mobility, as tunneling doublings in the spectrum confirm an internal rotation motion of water inside the cluster. The experimental results have been complemented with density-functional-theory molecular orbital calculations, binding energy decomposition and a topological analysis of the electronic density, providing a comparative description of the effects of hydrogen bonding of water to the alcohol and thiol groups in the dimers, relevant to understand hydrogen bonding to sulfur centers.
ABSTRACT
Cresyl and phenyl saligenin phosphates have been probed in a jet expansion by broadband chirp-excitation microwave spectroscopy, revealing the most stable conformations and their structural properties. The rotational parameters offer a high-resolution univocal route for characterization of organophosphorous agents and a testbed for computational models.
ABSTRACT
The hydrogen bonds involving sulfur in the furfuryl mercaptan monohydrate are compared with the interactions originating from the hydroxyl group in furfuryl alcohol. The dimers with water were created in a supersonic jet expansion and characterized using microwave spectroscopy and supporting molecular orbital calculations. In furfuryl alcohol-water, a single isomer is observed, in which the water molecule forms an insertion complex with two simultaneous hydrogen bonds to the alcohol (O-Hâ â â Ow ) and the ring oxygen (Ow -Hâ â â Or ). When the alcohol is replaced by a thiol group in furfuryl mercaptan-water, two isomers are observed, with the thiol group preferentially behaving as proton donor to water. The first isomer is topologically equivalent to the alcohol analog but the stronger hydrogen bond is now established by water and the ring oxygen, assisted by a thiol S-Hâ â â Ow hydrogen bond. In the second isomer the sulfur group accepts a proton from water, forming a Ow -Hâ â â S hydrogen bond. Binding energies for the mercaptan-water dimer are predicted around 12â kJ mol-1 weaker than in the alcohol hydrate (B3LYP-D3(BJ)). The non-covalent interactions in the furfuryl dimers are dominantly electrostatic according to a SAPT(0) energy decomposition, but with increasing dispersion components in the mercaptan dimers, which are larger for the isomer with the weaker Ow -Hâ â â S interaction.
ABSTRACT
Sparteine is a quinolizidine alkaloid used as a chiral auxiliary in asymmetric synthesis. We examine whether hydration by a single molecule can flip sparteine from the most stable trans conformation to the bidentate cis arrangement observed in catalytic complexation to a metal center. Sparteine and the sparteine-water dimer were generated in a supersonic jet expansion with H216O and H218O, and characterized by broadband chirped-pulse microwave spectroscopy. Even though the bidentate water dimer was predicted with larger binding energy, a single isomer was observed for the monohydrated cluster, with sparteine retaining the trans conformation observed for the free molecule. The absence of the bidentate dimer is attributed to the kinetic control of cluster formation, favoring the pre-expansion most abundant monomer. The structural properties of the O-HN hydrogen bond in the dimer are compared with those of complexes of other secondary and tertiary amines.
ABSTRACT
A novel DFT-based Reaction Kinetics (DFT-RK) simulation approach, employed in combination with real-time data from reaction monitoring instrumentation (like UV-vis, FTIR, Raman, and 2D NMR benchtop spectrometers), is shown to provide a detailed methodology for the analysis and design of complex synthetic chemistry schemes. As an example, it is applied to the opening of epoxides by titanocene in THF, a catalytic system with abundant experimental data available. Through a DFT-RK analysis of real-time IR data, we have developed a comprehensive mechanistic model that opens new perspectives to understand previous experiments. Although derived specifically from the opening of epoxides, the prediction capabilities of the model, built on elementary reactions, together with its practical side (reaction kinetics simulations of real experimental conditions) make it a useful simulation tool for the design of new experiments, as well as for the conception and development of improved versions of the reagents. From the perspective of the methodology employed, because both the computational (DFT-RK) and the experimental (spectroscopic data) components can follow the time evolution of several species simultaneously, it is expected to provide a helpful tool for the study of complex systems in synthetic chemistry.