Secondary
Electrostatic Interaction Model Revised:
Prediction Comes Mainly from Measuring Charge Accumulation in Hydrogen-Bonded
Monomers
Version 2 2019-04-03, 13:04Version 2 2019-04-03, 13:04
Version 1 2019-03-07, 16:33Version 1 2019-03-07, 16:33
Posted on 2019-04-03 - 13:04
The
secondary electrostatic interaction (SEI) model is often used
to predict and explain relative hydrogen bond strengths of self-assembled
systems. The SEI model oversimplifies the hydrogen-bonding mechanisms
by viewing them as interacting point charges, but nevertheless experimental
binding strengths are often in line with the model’s predictions.
To understand how this rudimentary model can be predictive, we computationally
studied two tautomeric quadruple hydrogen-bonded systems, DDAA-AADD
and DADA-ADAD. Our results reveal that when the proton donors D (which
are electron-donating) and the proton acceptors A (which are electron-withdrawing)
are grouped together as in DDAA, there is a larger accumulation of
charge around the frontier atoms than when the proton donor and acceptor
groups are alternating as in DADA. This accumulation of charge makes
the proton donors more positive and the proton acceptors more negative,
which enhances both the electrostatic and covalent interactions in
the DDAA dimer. The SEI model is thus predictive because it provides
a measure for the charge accumulation in hydrogen-bonded monomers.
Our findings can be understood from simple physical organic chemistry
principles and provide supramolecular chemists with meaningful understanding
for tuning hydrogen bond strengths and thus for controlling the properties
of self-assembled systems.
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van der Lubbe, Stephanie
C. C.; Zaccaria, Francesco; Sun, Xiaobo; Guerra, Célia Fonseca (2019). Secondary
Electrostatic Interaction Model Revised:
Prediction Comes Mainly from Measuring Charge Accumulation in Hydrogen-Bonded
Monomers. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.8b13358