A DFT Study on Intramolecular Hydrogen Bonding in 2-Substituted Phenols: Conformations, Enthalpies, and Correlation with Solute Parameters
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2002 papers
Abstract
For a series of 61 2-substituted phenols, 2-X−PhOH, forming a total of 73 intramolecular hydrogen bonds, the intramolecular hydrogen bond enthalpy, ΔHintra-HB, has been determined by density functional theory (DFT) calculations on the B3LYP/6-31G(d,p)//B3LYP/6-31G(d,p) level. The ΔHintra-HB was defined as the enthalpy difference between the hydrogen-bonded (HB) form and the lowest-energy conformer in which the OH is rotated into the “away” position. The correlation of ΔHintra-HB with geometrical factors such as r(O−H), or r(OH···A), with A as the hydrogen bond accepting atom, was generally very poor, showing that none of these parameters can be used as an universal descriptor for the hydrogen bond strength. The relation between ΔHintra-HB and ν(O−H) intra-HB is also insignificant, in contrast with previous estimates. The data clearly demonstrate that the genuine ΔHintra-HB of a phenolic compound cannot be unequivocally derived by simple rotation of the OH group into the “away” orientation, because additional steric and/or electronic 1,2 interactions may take place which are difficult or even impossible to be separated from the sole H-donor/acceptor interaction. Nevertheless, a good correlation has been found between computed and experimental liquid phase ν(O−H)s obeying ν(O−H)DFT = 1.0097ν(O−H)exp + 159.5. It could be established with the use of solute acidity, , and solvent basicity, , parameters, that the strength of an intramolecular hydrogen bond is noticeably fortified for electron withdrawing groups. Furthermore, it was found that with the proper non-HB geometries the bond dissociation enthalpy, BDE(O−H), in the series of 25 2-X-PhOHs correlates quite well with σ+, in the same way as has been found for 4-X-substituted phenols.
Related Papers
- → Theoretical Study on 1,2-Dihydroxybenzene and 2-Hydroxythiophenol: Intramolecular Hydrogen Bonding(1997)61 cited
- → Are hydrogen bonds responsible for glycine conformational preferences?(2011)30 cited
- → Intramolecular hydrogen bond and molecular conformation. Part 2.—Effect of pressure and temperature on the IR spectra of some hydroxy ketones(1994)9 cited
- → Studies of intramolecular hydrogen bonding in protonated and non-protonated hexahydropyridinobenzodioxins(2004)1 cited