Posts Tagged ‘Electric dipole moment’

A record polarity for a neutral compound?

Friday, April 13th, 2018

In several posts a year or so ago I considered various suggestions for the most polar neutral molecules, as measured by the dipole moment. A record had been claimed[1] for a synthesized molecule of ~14.1±0.7D. I pushed this to a calculated 21.7D for an admittedly hypothetical and unsynthesized molecule. Here I propose a new family of compounds which have the potential to extend the dipole moment for a formally neutral molecule up still further.

These molecules derive from a well-known class of molecule known as ortho-quinomethides. If the methide part is substituted with an electron donating substituent such as an amino group in 3, a push-pull opportunity now arises, which is strongly driven by aromatisation of the quinomethide ring. This allows one to design “neutral” molecules such as 1 and 2, which now contain respectively two and three rings that will be aromatised by the process. The aromatisation stabilization energy is balanced of course by an opposing increase in energy resulting from charge separation. You can observe that partially aromatising three independent rings as in 2 can drive a great deal of charge separation. One may indeed wonder how much charge separation can be sustained before a triplet instability occurs, driving the molecule back to being neutral. In the case of 2, the wavefunction is in fact stable to such an open shell state, but higher homologues may not be. An aspect worth investing!

1 2
DM 12.3 DM 31.5
DOI: 10.14469/hpc/4004 DOI: 10.14469/hpc/4059

Molecule 1 does have some precedent in 3[2] but this system exists as a phenol, having abstracted a proton from an acid and leaving behind the acid anion, as per below for 1. Any attempts to deprotonate this phenol with a superstrong base were unreported.

Unsurprisingly therefore, molecules such as 1 and 2 could be regarded as even more highly potent bases than 3, driven again by further aromatisation. The properties of such a potential superbase will be investigated in the next post.

References

  1. J. Wudarczyk, G. Papamokos, V. Margaritis, D. Schollmeyer, F. Hinkel, M. Baumgarten, G. Floudas, and K. Müllen, "Hexasubstituted Benzenes with Ultrastrong Dipole Moments", Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 55, pp. 3220-3223, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.201508249
  2. N.R. Candeias, L.F. Veiros, C.A.M. Afonso, and P.M.P. Gois, "Water: A Suitable Medium for the Petasis Borono‐Mannich Reaction", European Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 2009, pp. 1859-1863, 2009. https://doi.org/10.1002/ejoc.200900056

The dipole moments of highly polar molecules: glycine zwitterion.

Saturday, December 24th, 2016

The previous posts produced discussion about the dipole moments of highly polar molecules. Here to produce some reference points for further discussion I look at the dipole moment of glycine, the classic zwitterion (an internal ion-pair).

Dielectric relaxation studies of glycinewater mixtures yield values that range from 15.7D[1] to 11.9D[2] although these have to be derived using various approximations and assumptions for up to 4 independent Debye processes. Before proceeding to calculations, I looked at the properties of ionized amino acids in the solid state, using the following search query for the Cambridge structure database (CSD). 

The distance measures hydrogen bonds to the carboxylate oxygens and the torsion their orientation. The O…H hydrogen bond distances vary between 1.7-1.85Å, which are short. The orientation of the hydrogen bond can be to the in-plane oxygen “σ-lone pair” (torsion 0 or 180°) and also an out-of-plane ~π form (torsion ~60-90°).

In aqueous solution, it is normally assumed that glycine sustains five such strong H-bonds (three to the H3N+ group and two[3] to the carboxylate anion), forming a polarised “salt bridge” across the ion-pair. Two model types were subjected to calculation using ωB97XD/Def2-TZVPP/SCRF=water. Aqueous glycine without any added explicit water molecules yields a dipole moment of 12.9D (DOI: 10.14469/hpc/2000), which is within the range noted above.

The solvated form is shown below, in one specific conformation of the three studied (ωB97XD/Def2-TZVPP/SCRF=water). The calculated O…H hydrogen bond lengths fall into the range revealed from crystal structures. The calculated dipole moments range from 12.6 (DOI: 10.14469/hpc/2007), 15.3 (DOI: 10.14469/hpc/2006) and 14.9D (DOI: 10.14469/hpc/2005), which is a modest increase over the model with no explicit water molecules. The actual dipole is of course a Boltzmann average over these and other as yet unexplored conformations, as well as other values for the number of water molecules.

Given the difficulties in interpreting the dipole moment of a complex Debye system such as hydrated glycine, the agreement between the limited range of solvated models and the measured values seems reasonable, and provides at least some measure of “calibration” for the polar molecules commented on previously.


Optimized with the solvent field on. If a vacuum model is used, the proton transfers from the N to the O.

References

  1. M.W. Aaron, and E.H. Grant, "Dielectric relaxation of glycine in water", Transactions of the Faraday Society, vol. 59, pp. 85, 1963. https://doi.org/10.1039/tf9635900085
  2. T. Sato, R. Buchner, . Fernandez, A. Chiba, and W. Kunz, "Dielectric relaxation spectroscopy of aqueous amino acid solutions: dynamics and interactions in aqueous glycine", Journal of Molecular Liquids, vol. 117, pp. 93-98, 2005. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molliq.2004.08.001
  3. T. Shikata, "Dielectric Relaxation Behavior of Glycine Betaine in Aqueous Solution", The Journal of Physical Chemistry A, vol. 106, pp. 7664-7670, 2002. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp020957j