Posts Tagged ‘Bases’

What is the approach trajectory of enhanced (super?) nucleophiles towards a carbonyl group?

Wednesday, May 11th, 2016

I have previously commented on the Bürgi–Dunitz angle, this being the preferred approach trajectory of a nucleophile towards the electrophilic carbon of a carbonyl group. Some special types of nucleophile such as hydrazines (R2N-NR2) are supposed to have enhanced reactivity[1] due to what might be described as buttressing of adjacent lone pairs. Here I focus in on how this might manifest by performing searches of the Cambridge structural database for intermolecular (non-bonded) interactions between X-Y nucleophiles (X,Y= N,O,S) and carbonyl compounds OC(NM)2.

The search query[2] is shown above and involves plotting the distance from the nucleophilic atom (N above) to the carbon of the carbonyl group. The carbon is defined as having 3-coordination, one of which is O=C and two non-metal attachments. The torsion is constrained to values of |70-110|° to ensure that the approach of the nucleophile is approximately perpendicular to the plane of the carbonyl in order to overlap with the π*-orbital as electrophile. The pairwise sums of van der Waals radii are NC, 3.25; OC, 3.22 and SC, 3.5Å and the plots show all contacts shorter than these. The results of the searches are shown below.

The general observation is that the red hotspots do tend to come at trajectory angles of <100° and many are <90° such as the X=Y=N or X=Y=S examples. Given that the original Bürgi–Dunitz hypothesis (actually based on a small number of molecules synthesized for the purpose) proposed rather larger angles (105±5°) corresponding to optimum alignment of the nucleophile with the carbonyl π*-orbital, we might speculate whether the use of enhanced nucleophiles is the reason for the apparent decrease in the angle. And if so, what the underlying reasons would be.

I also cannot help but observe that the term supernucleophile is quite rare in the literature; SciFinder gives only 45 hits, but most are about neither hydrazines nor peroxides. There are also some unusual nucleophile varieties such as Cob(I)alamin[3], of which there are probably insufficient examples to reflect in the crystal structure statistics shown above. Given the interest in superbases, the relative lack of examples of unusual supernucleophiles seems surprising.

References

  1. G. Klopman, K. Tsuda, J. Louis, and R. Davis, "Supernucleophiles—I", Tetrahedron, vol. 26, pp. 4549-4554, 1970. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0040-4020(01)93101-1
  2. H. Rzepa, "Crystal structure search using enhanced nucleophiles", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/hpc/487
  3. K.P. Jensen, "Electronic Structure of Cob(I)alamin:  The Story of an Unusual Nucleophile", The Journal of Physical Chemistry B, vol. 109, pp. 10505-10512, 2005. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp050802m

Azane oxide, a tautomer of hydroxylamine.

Friday, April 15th, 2016

In the previous post I described how hydronium hydroxide or H3O+…HO, an intermolecular tautomer of water, has recently been observed captured inside an organic cage[1] and how the free-standing species in water can be captured computationally with the help of solvating water bridges. Here I explore azane oxide or H3N+-O, a tautomer of the better known hydroxylamine (H2N-OH).

The usual search[2] of the Cambridge structure database reveals only two (related) entries[3],[4] the second reported in 2015.[5].

NH3-8
NH3-8

Now, location of hydrogen atoms is always a bit tricky, but here we see two species H3N+-OH…O-+NH3 connected by a strong hydrogen bond of 1.54Å (click on the above image to see this packing). However, it is noteworthy that the N-O bonds for each of these species are exactly the same length (1.412Å); one might have imagined that whether the oxygen carries a proton or not would affect its bond length to nitrogen. There is here a strong hint that energetically the azane oxide might be relatively low in energy relative to hydroxylamine and perhaps that the zwitterionic form might be favoured when captured with hydrogen bonds.

So certainly time for a computational exploration of this species. I am using the three water bridges as before, each comprised of three water molecules and the ωB97XD/6-311++G(d,p)/SCRF=water method. In fact the structure optimises[6] to a delightful propeller-like geometry in which bridges are formed from both two AND three waters across the ion-pair, with overall three-fold C3 symmetry (i.e. chiral! Indeed, this species has a predicted optical rotation of 40° at 589nm).

NH3-8

Hydroxylamine itself has a less symmetric arrangement of hydrogen bonds[7], with a free energy in fact very similar (within 1 kcal/mol) to the ion-pair isomer. Here, a stochastic (statistical) exploration of all the various arrangements of water would be needed to be confident that the lowest energy form had been located. I would note that the N-O bond lengths in the ion-pair and neutral forms are respectively 1.399 and 1.435Å.

NH3-8

Certainly, this very brief computational look at azane oxide suggests that concentrations of this species in aqueous solutions of hydroxylamine might be appreciable (detectable). Its "trapping" inside a suitably designed cavity must be a realistic possibility (the cavity used to trap hydronium hydroxide probably does not have the correct dimensions for this purpose), as indeed illustrated in the two crystal structures noted above.


I have represented this species in ionic form, but you may find text books showing it in dative form, or H3N→O. My personal inclination is to always prefer the ionic form, if only because it enables connections/analogies such as the one here to hydronium hydroxide to be more easily made.

References

  1. M. Stapf, W. Seichter, and M. Mazik, "Unique Hydrogen‐Bonded Complex of Hydronium and Hydroxide Ions", Chemistry – A European Journal, vol. 21, pp. 6350-6354, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.201406383
  2. H. Rzepa, "Search for Azane oxide", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/hpc/380
  3. Fischer, Dennis., Klapotke, Thomas M.., and Stierstorfer, Jorg., "CCDC 1054611: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination", 2015. https://doi.org/10.5517/cc14ddqn
  4. Fischer, D.., Klapotke, T.M.., and Stierstorfer, J.., "CCDC 827687: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination", 2012. https://doi.org/10.5517/ccws8lh
  5. D. Fischer, T.M. Klapötke, and J. Stierstorfer, "1,5‐Di(nitramino)tetrazole: High Sensitivity and Superior Explosive Performance", Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 54, pp. 10299-10302, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.201502919
  6. H.S. Rzepa, "H 21 N 1 O 10", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/192000
  7. H.S. Rzepa, "H 21 N 1 O 10", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/192001

Ways to encourage water to protonate an amine: superbasing.

Friday, April 8th, 2016

Previously, I looked at models of how ammonia could be protonated by water to form ammonium hydroxide. The energetic outcome of my model matched the known equilbrium in water as favouring the unprotonated form (pKb ~4.75). I add here two amines for which R=Me3Si and R=CN. The idea is that the first will assist nitrogen protonation by stabilising the positive centre and the second will act in the opposite sense; an exploration if you like of how one might go about computationally designing a non-steric superbasic amine that becomes predominantly protonated when exposed to water (pKb <1) and is thus more basic than hydroxide anion in this medium.

NH3-8

Before reporting any calculations, let us see what the CSD (Cambridge structure database) might contain. The search query is simple, a 3-coordinate amine forming a 4-coordinate quaternary nitrogen with one N-H and a positive (formal) charge on the N, and a 1-coordinate oxygen with one O-H and a negative charge on the O. With the constraints R < 10%, no disorder and no errors, one gets as many as 15 hits,[1] several of which also apparently contain separate water molecules in the crystal. A warning bell (perhaps several) sounds, since if R < 5%, the number of hits drops to just 2; these are clearly difficult structures to refine! So there is some tantalising evidence that in the solid state at least, the quaternary ammonium group (with at least one N-H), water and a hydroxide anion might be capable of co-existence. As noted below some fascinating 2-coordinate amines have also been reported as having superbasic properties.

NH3-8

R=CN: the well known compound cyanamide is known to act only as an acid and its basic properties are never quoted. Shown below is the reaction path for transfer of a proton from water to the amine using an 8-water model (n=8) in which two bridges can serve to help stabilize any ionic form. The energy required to do so however is at least 24 kcal/mol (ωB97XD/Def2-TZVPPD/SCRF=water) which indicates that no protonated amine is formed. This can be attributed to the electron withdrawing cyano group strongly destablising any adjacent positive ammonium centre and thus effectively completely inhibiting its formation.

NH3-8

R=Me3Si: this too is already known[2],[3] but only in the presence of the non-coordinating counter-anion B(C6F5)4 crystallised from non-protic solution. An ionised form can now be located using the model above. This has the structure shown below; note the very short hydrogen bonds associated with the hydroxide anion and the possibility of forming only two water bridges across the ion-pair. The relative free energy of the ion-pair (table below) shows it to be if anything less basic than ammonia. 

NH3-8

n=8 R=H R=SiMe3 R=CN
ΔΔG298 7.0[4]

7.6[5],[6]

>24[7]

NBO (natural bond orbital) analysis might here  be a useful metric of basicity. Hence Me3SiNH2…H2O  suggests that donation from the N lone pair into an antiperiplanar Si-C bond is quite large (E(2) = 11.9 kcal/mol), although alternative donation by nitrogen into the H-O σ* bond  of the water is much higher (33.4 kcal/mol). 

Perhaps the basicity of simple amines is related to their ability to form stabilizing water bridges across the ion-pair? With trimethylsilyl substituents, this feature (and hence the basicity) is partially or even fully suppressed as in e.g. tris(trimethylsilyl)amine.The pKb of the latter appears to be unreported[8] but it does seem to be only weakly basic and "inert to H2O",[9] a property attributed instead to multiple character in the Si-N bonds. 

I will in a future post look at the alternative class of phosphazenium amines which do manage to achieve superbasicity.[10]


A phosphazenium 3-coordinate amine[11] was in 1991 claimed to be the strongest metal-free neutral base. This has now been superceded by combining this base motif with that of a sterically operating proton sponge.[12],[10] I will report the computational modelling of these systems in a later post.

One of the structures identified with R<10% is UBEJIU[13] and which is worth showing below. Note the apparent close contact of the type N-H…H-O (1.416-1.463Å) rather than the expected N-H…OH.  If correct (this feature is not mentioned in the article itself) it would be classified as a dihydrogen bond, a type normally only found in situations such as B-H…H-N. There are a number of other inconsistencies which must be resolved if this structure is to stand as correct.

NH3-8

References

  1. H. Rzepa, "Substituted ammonium hydroxides", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/hpc/361
  2. Y. Sarazin, J.A. Wright, and M. Bochmann, "Synthesis and crystal structure of [C6H5Hg(H2NSiMe3)][H2N{B(C6F5)3}2], a phenyl–mercury(II) cation stabilised by a non-coordinating counter-anion", Journal of Organometallic Chemistry, vol. 691, pp. 5680-5687, 2006. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jorganchem.2006.09.021
  3. Sarazin, Y.., Wright, J.A.., and Bochmann, M.., "CCDC 608250: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination", 2007. https://doi.org/10.5517/ccndxzx
  4. H.S. Rzepa, and H.S. Rzepa, "H21NO9", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191946
  5. H.S. Rzepa, and H.S. Rzepa, "C 3 H 29 N 1 O 9 Si 1", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191987
  6. H.S. Rzepa, and H.S. Rzepa, "C 3 H 29 N 1 O 9 Si 1", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191982
  7. H.S. Rzepa, "CH20N2O9", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191983
  8. E.W. Abel, D.A. Armitage, and G.R. Willey, "Relative base strengths of some organosilicon amines", Transactions of the Faraday Society, vol. 60, pp. 1257, 1964. https://doi.org/10.1039/tf9646001257
  9. J. Goubeau, and J. Jimenéz‐Barberá, "Tris‐(trimethylsilyl)‐amin", Zeitschrift für anorganische und allgemeine Chemie, vol. 303, pp. 217-226, 1960. https://doi.org/10.1002/zaac.19603030502
  10. Kögel, Julius F.., Oelkers, Benjamin., Kovačević, Borislav., and Sundermeyer, Jörg., "CCDC 1002088: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination", 2014. https://doi.org/10.5517/cc12mrfw
  11. R. Schwesinger, and H. Schlemper, "Peralkylated Polyaminophosphazenes— Extremely Strong, Neutral Nitrogen Bases", Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English, vol. 26, pp. 1167-1169, 1987. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.198711671
  12. J.F. Kögel, B. Oelkers, B. Kovačević, and J. Sundermeyer, "A New Synthetic Pathway to the Second and Third Generation of Superbasic Bisphosphazene Proton Sponges: The Run for the Best Chelating Ligand for a Proton", Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 135, pp. 17768-17774, 2013. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja409760z
  13. P. Vianello, A. Albinati, G.A. Pinna, A. Lavecchia, L. Marinelli, P.A. Borea, S. Gessi, P. Fadda, S. Tronci, and G. Cignarella, "Synthesis, Molecular Modeling, and Opioid Receptor Affinity of 9,10-Diazatricyclo[4.2.1.1<sup>2,5</sup>]decanes and 2,7-Diazatricyclo[4.4.0.0<sup>3,8</sup>]decanes Structurally Related to 3,8-Diazabicyclo[3.2.1]octanes", Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, vol. 43, pp. 2115-2123, 2000. https://doi.org/10.1021/jm991140q

How many water molecules does it take to form ammonium hydroxide from ammonia and water?

Sunday, March 20th, 2016

This is a corollary to the previous post exploring how many molecules are needed to ionise HCl. Here I am asking how many water molecules are required to form the ionic ammonium hydroxide from ammonia and water.

As Wikipedia will inform you, "it is actually impossible to isolate samples of NH4OH (more formally the ion-pair NH4+OH ) as these ions do not comprise a significant fraction of the total amount of ammonia except in extremely dilute solutions (my italics)". In fact, the ionization constant Kb = [NH4+][OH]/[NH3][H2O] is ~1.8 x 10-5 (pKb 4.75) equivalent to a free energy difference of  ~6.5 kcal/mol between the two forms. This is in stark contrast to solutions of e.g. HCl in water, where essentially all of the HCl is ionised to hydronium chloride or H3O+Clby addition of just ~4-5 water molecules. So what is the water model required to compute this known behaviour of ammonia? Here, this will be ωB97Xd/Def2-TZVPPD/SCRF=water, i.e. a continuum water model is already included and we add n further discrete water molecules to enhance it.

For n=0 or 2, the ion-pair is not an explicit minimum (although it appears to be a "hidden intermediate"[1]). Values of e.g. n=4,6,8 allow the formation of two or three "bridges" comprising two or three water molecules connecting the N and O atoms by hydrogen bonds and this additional solvation enables location of a transition state for proton transfer between O and N. This implies an equilibrium can be established as NH3 + H2O ⇌* NH4+.OH with the ion-pair now a genuine minimum stabilized by those ion-pair bridges. Note in particular how the hydrogen bond lengths involving the water salt-bridge in the ion-pair are shorter than for the neutral water-ammonia complex.

NH3-8

The contact ion-pair is nevertheless a very shallow minimum when surrounded by 4 or more explicit waters, the barrier from proton transfer from N being less than a vibrational quantum, and so the lifetime of the contact ion-pair is very much defined by the proton dynamics of the system..

4

8

For n=8, the dipole moment changes along the IRC for proton transfer between N and O as might be expected for the collapse of a contact ion-pair.

8dm

The relative free energies of the ion-pair and the un-ionized pair are shown below, the former being the higher. The values correspond approximately to the known ionization constant. As more explicit water molecules are added, there is a hint that the proportion of ion-pairs might actually decrease relative to neutral ammonia. However, these calculations are for a contact ion-pair and not a solvent-separated ion pair, the latter form possibly being the more appropriate form for extremely dilute solutions (see above). Modelling the latter type of ion-pair is not as straightforward as the contact variety;  as the ion separation increases, so the propensity for barrierless proton transfers increases, ultimately leading back to the contact form. So to understand if it is correct that in extremely dilute solutions there is no remaining neutral ammonia, probably only a full molecular dynamics treatment of such a system is likely to give further insights.

n 4 6 8
 ΔΔG298 6.4[2] 5.9[3] 7.0[4]

To summarise, in order to compute the formation of the ammonium hydroxide ion pair from ammonia and water, one has to include an additional four or more explicit water molecules in the calculation. This model confirms that in the resulting equilibrium, only a tiny proportion of the ammonia becomes ionised. With such a base model in place, one can now proceed to investigate how addition of substituents on the nitrogen might impact upon such ionisation, i.e. to form a stronger or a weaker base.


A more complete analysis followed.[5] *If you are wondering how to produce a reversible arrow, see here. This is only approximate, since the concentration of water needs renormalising.

 

References

  1. https://doi.org/
  2. H.S. Rzepa, and H.S. Rzepa, "H13NO5", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191950
  3. https://doi.org/
  4. H.S. Rzepa, and H.S. Rzepa, "H21NO9", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191946
  5. A. Vargas‐Caamal, J.L. Cabellos, F. Ortiz‐Chi, H.S. Rzepa, A. Restrepo, and G. Merino, "How Many Water Molecules Does it Take to Dissociate HCl?", Chemistry – A European Journal, vol. 22, pp. 2812-2818, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.201504016

I’ve started so I’ll finish. The ionisation mechanism and kinetic isotope effects for 1,3-dimethylindolin-2 one

Thursday, January 7th, 2016

This is the third and final study deriving from my Ph.D.[1]. The first two topics dealt with the mechanism of heteroaromatic electrophilic attack using either a diazonium cation or a proton as electrophile, followed by either proton abstraction or carbon dioxide loss from the resulting Wheland intermediate. This final study inverts this sequence by starting with the proton abstraction from an indolinone by a base to create/aromatize to a indole-2-enolate intermediate, which only then is followed by electrophilic attack (by iodine).  Here I explore what light quantum chemical modelling might cast on the mechanism.

Indole diazocoupling

The concentration of I3 is used to follow the reaction, given by the expression:  [I3] = k1[B][indolinone]t – k-1/k2*ln[I3] + const, where  k2* = k2/715[I] + k2' , the latter being the rate coefficient for the reaction between the enolate intermediate and I3. With appropriate least squares analysis of this rate equation, a value for k1 using either 1H or 2H (≡ D) isotopes can be extracted and this gives an isotope effect k1H/k1D of 6.3 ± 0.6. Note that this value does NOT depend on [B]. Here, I am going to try to see if I can construct a quantum mechanical model which reproduces this value.

Indole diazocoupling

  1. Model 1 uses just three water molecules as a proton relay (B3LYP+D3/Def2-TZVP/SCRF=water).
  2. Model 2 uses 2H2O.NaOH solvated by two extra passive water molecules. Since under these conditions, the NaOH is largely ionic, [B] ≡ [OH]
Model ΔG298 (ΔH298) kH/kD (298K) DataDOIs
1 28.0 (22.9) 10.3 [2],[3],[4]
2 2.5 (2.8) 4.4 [5],[6],[7]

The plot of rate vs [B] shows[1] that the uncatalysed (water) rate is very slow (intercept passes more or less through zero) and the calculated free energy barrier (28.0 kcal/mol) confirms a slow rate at ambient temperatures. Note in the final (aromatized) product, there is a noticeable hydrogen bond between the 3-carbon and a water molecule (2.14Å). The calculated kinetic isotope effect[8] is substantially larger than observed experimentally for the base catalysed contribution.

Indolineone ionization using 3 water molecules

In the presence of NaOH (standard state = 1 atm = 0.044M), the enthalpy barrier drops very substantially to 2.8 kcal/mol and the free energy to 2.5 kcal/mol. Similar behaviour was noted previously on this blog for the hydrolysis of thalidomide. Although the magnitude of the reduction in barrier in fact implies an extremely fast reaction, recollect that [B]=[OH] appears in the rate equation  and since its value is very much less than 0.044M, the observed rate is relatively slow.

Indolineone ionization using 3 water molecules + NaOH

The calculated KIE for the hydroxide catalysed mechanism is much smaller that for the water route, but also smaller than is observed. This is a value uncorrected for tunnelling, which given the small barrier might be significant. 

These calculations show how a model for ionization of indolinone can be constructed, and used to e.g. probe the sensitivity of KIE to perturbations induced by ring substituents, which may form the basis of a future post.


This is a non-linear equation with kinetics that straddle zero and first order behaviour. In 1972, it was not easily possible to graph such functions in a manner where the slope of a linear plot would yield the rate constant. It was only computers and languages such as Fortran which allowed such non-linear least squares analysis of the rate. In the event, it turned out that the presence of 50% methanol in the mixed aqueous solutions was the cause; in other solvents the kinetics approximated zero order behavour very well.

References

  1. B.C. Challis, and H.S. Rzepa, "Heteroaromatic hydrogen exchange reactions. Part VIII. The ionisation of 1,3-dimethylindolin-2-one", Journal of the Chemical Society, Perkin Transactions 2, pp. 1822, 1975. https://doi.org/10.1039/p29750001822
  2. H.S. Rzepa, "C 10 H 17 N 1 O 4", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191786
  3. H.S. Rzepa, "C 10 H 17 N 1 O 4", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191765
  4. H.S. Rzepa, "C10H17NO4", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191784
  5. H.S. Rzepa, "C 10 H 20 N 1 Na 1 O 6", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191787
  6. H.S. Rzepa, "C 10 H 20 N 1 Na 1 O 6", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191782
  7. H.S. Rzepa, "C10H20NNaO6", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191785
  8. H. Rzepa, "Mechanisms and kinetic isotope effects for the base catalysed ionisation of 1,3-dimethyl indolinone.", 2016. https://doi.org/10.14469/hpc/202