Posts Tagged ‘search software’

π-Facial hydrogen bonds to alkenes (revisited): how close can an acidic hydrogen approach?

Saturday, April 15th, 2017

Back in the early 1990s, we first discovered the delights of searching crystal structures for unusual bonding features.[1] One of the first cases was a search for hydrogen bonds formed to the π-faces of alkenes and alkynes. In those days the CSD database of crystal structures was a lot smaller (<80,000 structures; it’s now ten times larger) and the search software less powerful. So here is an update. 

The search query (dataDOI:10.14469/hpc/2473) is shown below:

  1. A mid-point (centroid) of a C-C bond (of any type) is defined, but the carbons are each restricted to being 3-coordinate, with the substituents R being either C or H.
  2. The distance to a hydrogen (attached to group QA, where QA is any one of N,O,F,Cl, i.e. acidic H) is defined.
  3. The properties of the alkene are defined by the sines of the two angles subtended at the centroid. This defines how perpendicular the QA-H hydrogen bond is to the C-C bond.
  4. Four torsions R-C-centroid-H are defined by their sines. The mean of the absolute values of these will define how orthogonal the approach of the hydrogen to the π-π plane is.
  5. Further constraints in the search are no disorder, no errors, R < 0.05,  the H atom position is normalised and this position is defined as being <2.5Å from the C-C bond centroid, which is ~0.3Å < the sum of the van der Waals values for C and H.

The first search is limited to intermolecular contacts between the C-C bond and the H and reveals that for most of the 18 hits, the H approach is close to perpendicular to the centroid but the inclination to the π-π plane is more scattered. The most interesting (shortest H…centroid contact of ~2.22Å, orthogonal approach) can be inspected as KANYAA (dataDOI: 10.5517/CC8JRQ7). 
When the search is repeated for intramolecular contacts, rather shorter distances are obtained for 88 hits and with more variation in the angles of approach. The most interesting candidate (blue dots) is IGELAJ[2] (dataDOI: 10.5517/CC14PBW1 ) which has the very short intramolecular H approach of 1.90Å to the C-C centroid corresponding to ~2.04Å to the carbons,  a contraction of ~0.8Å from the van der Waals sum.

The authors remarked[2]  “that it possesses a better defined intramolecular hydrogen bond compared to the usual molecules for which it is noted“. They also note JOCQEX, which is present in the above plot, but for which there is  a non-orthogonal approach of the hydrogen bond to the π-π plane. The authors do not mention TIBCUD[3] (dataDOI: 10.5517/CCPL0FP), which has a similar close approach of 1.92Å to the C-C centroid, but at an angle inclined to the C-C axis.

IGELAJ, as an intramolecular H-bond, was amenable to calculation of its geometry and properties (inter-molecular interactions would ideally require the periodic lattice to be computed), with the observation[3] that “another test was to compare the energy calculation of IGELAJ to a non-hydrogen-bound version where the OH bond is rotated 180°” and “the results predict IGELAJ to be 7.30 kcal more stable than the non-hydrogen-bound version”. This value,  if correct,  is indeed typical of a very strong hydrogen bond!

Pedant (curious?) as I am, I wanted to be clear what kind of calculated energy was being reported. Was it the difference in total energies, or the energies corrected for ZPE (zero-point-energy) as ΔH or the free energies for which entropy is included as ΔG? The article[3] itself is unclear on this aspect and no energies are reported in the  supporting information. This is an illustration that “supporting information” in most current incarnations may often not provide crucial information; only a full deposition as the management of research (RDM) of FAIR data can provide. This process is illustrated for my own calculations of this system (ωB97XD/Def2-TZVPP, dataDOIs: 10.14469/hpc/2474, 10.14469/hpc/2475), which reveals that  ΔG298 4.8 kcal/mol and ν 3761 cm-1. In comparison when the OH bond is rotated 180° the wavenumber goes up 3956 cm-1, a difference of 195 cm-1 is calculated, which is indeed a large red-shift. But the “non-hydrogen-bound version where the OH bond is rotated 180°” is not a valid reference point for a non-hydrogen bonded isomer, since it manifests instead as a transition state for OH rotation with νi 166 cm-1, there being no minimum other than the π-facially hydrogen bonded one (dataDOI: 10.14469/hpc/2476). So, for the lack of a suitable reference system, we cannot conclude what the strength of this particular hydrogen bond is, nor make any conclusions about it being unusually strong.

So IGELAJ holds the current record for the shortest π-facial hydrogen bond to an alkene, but not necessarily the strongest! I wonder if this record might be broken with the aid of further computational design and prediction?

References

  1. H.S. Rzepa, M.H. Smith, and M.L. Webb, "A crystallographic AM1 and PM3 SCF-MO investigation of strong OH ⋯π-alkene and alkyne hydrogen bonding interactions", J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 2, pp. 703-707, 1994. https://doi.org/10.1039/p29940000703
  2. M.D. Struble, M.G. Holl, G. Coombs, M.A. Siegler, and T. Lectka, "Synthesis of a Tight Intramolecular OH···Olefin Interaction, Probed by IR,<sup>1</sup>H NMR, and Quantum Chemistry", The Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 80, pp. 4803-4807, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.5b00470
  3. B. Ndjakou Lenta, K.P. Devkota, B. Neumann, E. Tsamo, and N. Sewald, "4-(1,1-Dimethylprop-2-enyl)-1,3,5-trihydroxy-2-(3-methylbut-2-enyl)-9<i>H</i>-xanthen-9-one", Acta Crystallographica Section E Structure Reports Online, vol. 63, pp. o1629-o1631, 2007. https://doi.org/10.1107/s1600536807009907

Molecules of the year? Pnictogen chains and 16 coordinate Cs.

Monday, December 19th, 2016

I am completing my survey of the vote for molecule of the year candidates, which this year seems focused on chemical records of one type or another.

The first article[1] reports striving towards creating a molecule covering a complete column of the period table. In this case, group 7, containing N, P, As, Sb, Bi and Mc. Only the first four of these were incorporated, although the prospects of extending this to five seem good (and to six extremely unlikely).  The structure of this pnictogen chain is referenced here: DOI: 10.5517/CCDC.CSD.CC1LHPJ9 and I have demurred from a calculation.

The second article[2] relates to what might be called hypercoordination, and the achievement of what is felt is a maximum value of 16 to a single metal. I thought I might approach this one by searching the Cambridge structure database (CSD) by specifying any metal with a coordination number 16 as the search query. However, I was foiled in this query because the search software (Conquest) allows a maximum value of only 15! So instead I list the total number of hits retrieved for coordination numbers of 10-15: 25224, 4753, 8856, 2492, 839, 348 respectively.  

These totals have to be taken with some caution; the coordination number of what may often be very weak interactions may be often determined by human chemical perception rather than hard and fast rules. Nevertheless, the assignment of 348 molecules to having a coordination number of 15 is still a remarkably high number. If I can persuade CCDC to allow searches with 16, who knows what other candidates might emerge to rival this one, DOI: CCDC.CSD.CC1KFCQ2

The final candidate[3] is the only one where no measured coordinates are reported, with the title “Preparation of an ion with the highest calculated proton affinity: ortho-diethynylbenzene dianion”. There high level theoretical and computational modelling is reported to which I cannot add anything useful.

The common theme emerging of my review is that most of the candidates have crystal structures to which I have been able to occasionally add some computed quantum mechanical properties to try to tease out some other aspects of their character. It is also nice to be able to cite a persistent identifier (DOI) that leads directly to the 3D coordinates for the structures. My first ever post to this blog in 2008 addressed one solution on how such immediacy might be achieved and it is nice to see this now as a mainstream aspect of chemical publishing.

References

  1. A. Hinz, A. Schulz, and A. Villinger, "Synthesis of a Molecule with Four Different Adjacent Pnictogens", Chemistry – A European Journal, vol. 22, pp. 12266-12269, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.201601916
  2. D. Pollak, R. Goddard, and K. Pörschke, "Cs[H<sub>2</sub>NB<sub>2</sub>(C<sub>6</sub>F<sub>5</sub>)<sub>6</sub>] Featuring an Unequivocal 16-Coordinate Cation", Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 138, pp. 9444-9451, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.6b02590
  3. B.L.J. Poad, N.D. Reed, C.S. Hansen, A.J. Trevitt, S.J. Blanksby, E.G. Mackay, M.S. Sherburn, B. Chan, and L. Radom, "Preparation of an ion with the highest calculated proton affinity: ortho-diethynylbenzene dianion", Chemical Science, vol. 7, pp. 6245-6250, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6sc01726f

Deviations from tetrahedral four-coordinate carbon: a statistical exploration.

Sunday, September 6th, 2015

An article entitled “Four Decades of the Chemistry of Planar Hypercoordinate Compounds[1] was recently reviewed by Steve Bacharach on his blog, where you can also see comments. Given the recent crystallographic themes here, I thought I might try a search of the CSD (Cambridge structure database) to see whether anything interesting might emerge for tetracoordinate carbon.

The search definition is shown below using a  simple carbon with four ligands, the ligands themselves also being tetracoordinate carbon. The search is restricted to data collected below temperatures of 140K, as well as R-factor <5%, no errors and no disorder. Cyclic species are allowed and a statistically reasonable 2773 hits emerged from the search.

Scheme

Recollect that the idealised angle subtended at the centre is 109.47°. I show below three separate heat plots of the search results. Why three? The way the search software (Conquest) works is that one could define four C-C distances and six angles, and then plot any combination of one distance and one angle. I show just three combinations here, but could have included many more.

There appear to be four distinct clusters of values for this angle that emerge from the three plots shown below (the “bin size” is 100, and the frequency colour code indicates how many hits there are in each bin).

  1. The hotspot is unsurprisingly ~109° with a corresponding C-C distance of ~1.54Å.
  2. There may be two clusters at angles of ~60° (cyclopropane), with C-C values ranging from ~1.47 to ~1.55Å.
  3. A collection at ~90° (mostly cyclobutane?), with C-C values up to 1.6Å.
  4. A collection at ~140° (again small rings), now with much shorter C-C values of ~1.46Å. This reminds of the approximation that the hybridisation in e.g. cyclopropane is a combination of sp5 and sp3.

Scheme

Scheme

Scheme

Ideally, what one might want to plot would be sums of four angles; for a pure tetrahedral carbon the sum would always be 438° (4*109.47°) but for a pure planar carbon it could be as low as 360° (4*90°). One could then see how closely the distribution approaches to the latter and hence reveal whether there are any true planar tetracoordinate carbon species known. Although the Conquest software cannot analyse in such terms, a Python-based API has recently been released that should allow this to be done, although I should state that this requires a commercial license and it is not open access code. If we manage to get it working, I will report!


As a teaser I also include a plot of six-coordinate carbon, in which the ligands can be any non-metal. Note the clusters at angles of 60, ~112 and ~120-130°. It is worth pointing out that the definition of the connection between a carbon and a ligand as a “bond” becomes increasingly arbitrary as the coordination becomes “hyper”. Because crystallography does not measure electron densities in “bonds”, we know nothing of its topology in this region. It is therefore quite possible that the appearance of the heat plot below might be related just as much to whatever convention is being used in creating the entry in the CSD as it would be to a quantum analysis of the bonding.

Scheme

References

  1. L. Yang, E. Ganz, Z. Chen, Z. Wang, and P.V.R. Schleyer, "Four Decades of the Chemistry of Planar Hypercoordinate Compounds", Angewandte Chemie International Edition, vol. 54, pp. 9468-9501, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.201410407