skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Search for: All records

Award ID contains: 2003603

Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher. Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
What is a DOI Number?

Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.

  1. Abstract The studies of the anion‐π interactions advanced during the last two decades from the discussion of the mere existence of this counter‐intuitive bonding to its utilization for anion recognition and transport, catalysis, and other applications. Yet, there are substantial differences in the interpretation of nature and the driving forces of anion‐π bonding. Most surprisingly, there are still different opinions about the meaning of this term (i. e., which associations can be considered anion‐π complexes). After a brief overview of the studies in this area (including early examples of such complexes), we suggested that anion‐π bonding occurs when there is evidence of a net attraction between a (close‐shell) anion and the face of an electrophilic π‐system. This definition encompasses fundamentally similar supramolecular complexes comprising diverse π‐systems and anions and its general acceptance would facilitate a discussion of the nature and distinct driving forces of this fascinating interaction. 
    more » « less
  2. Anion–π complexes with the electron-deficient alkene, tetracyanoethylene, are similar to that with aromatic and p-benzoquinone π-acceptors, but their persistence is delimited by the 1e-donating strength and nucleophilicity of anions. 
    more » « less
  3. 4-Nitroquinoline-N-oxide (NQO) and 4-nitropyridine-N-oxide (NPO) are important precursors for the synthesis of substituted heterocycles while NQO is a popular model mutagen and carcinogen broadly used in cancer research; intermolecular interactions are critical for their reactions or functioning in vivo. Herein, the effects of the coordination of N-oxide’s oxygen atom to Lewis acids on multicenter donor–acceptor bonding were explored via a combination of experimental and computational studies of the complexes of NQO and NPO with a typical π-electron donor, pyrene. Coordination with ZnCl2 increased the positive electrostatic potentials on the surfaces of these π-acceptors and lowered the energy of their LUMO. Analogous effects were observed upon the protonation of the N-oxides’ oxygen or bonding with boron trifluoride. The interaction of ZnCl2, NPO, or NQO and pyrene resulted in the formation of dark co-crystals comprising π-stacked Zn-coordinated N-oxides and pyrene similar to that found with protonated or (reported earlier) BF3-bonded N-oxides. Computational studies indicated that the coordination of N-oxides to zinc(II), BF3, or protonation led to the strengthening of the multicenter bonding of the nitro-heterocycle with pyrene, and this effect was related both to the increased electrostatic attraction and molecular–orbital interactions in their complexes. 
    more » « less
  4. Haloalkanes and amines are common halogen-bond (XB) donors and acceptors as well as typical reagents in nucleophilic substitution reactions. Thus, crystal engineering using these molecules requires an understanding of the interchange between these processes. Indeed, we previously reported that the interaction of quinuclidine (QN) with CHI3 in acetonitrile yielded co-crystals showing a XB network of these two constituents. In the current work, the interactions of QN with C2H5I or 1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane (DABCO) with CH2I2 led to nucleophilic substitution producing I− anions and quaternary ammonium (QN-CH2CH3 or DABCO-CH2I+) cations. Moreover, the reaction of QN with CHI3 in dichloromethane afforded co-crystals containing XB networks of CHI3 with either Cl− or I− anions and QN-CH2Cl+ counter-ions. A similar reaction in acetone produced XB networks comprising CHI3, I− and QN-CH2COCH3+. These distinctions were rationalized through a computational analysis of XB complexes and the transition-state energies for the nucleophilic substitution. It indicated that the outcome of the reactions was determined mostly by the relative energies of the products. The co-crystals obtained in this work showed bonding between the cationic (DABCO-CH2I+, QN-CH2Cl+) or neutral (CHI3) XB donors and the anionic (I−, Cl−) or neutral (CHI3) acceptors. Their analysis showed comparable electron and energy densities at the XB bond critical points and similar XB energies regardless of the charges of the interacting species. 
    more » « less
  5. The relationship between solid-state supramolecular interactions and crystal habits is highlighted based on experimental and computational analysis of the crystal structure of strong halogen-bonded (HaB) associations between iodine-containing dihalogens (ICl, IBr) with 1,4-diazabicyclo[2,2,2]octane (DABCO) as well as with substituted pyridines and phenazine. The pattern of the energy frameworks and the interplay of the attractive and repulsive interactions in the solid-state associations involving these HaB donors and acceptors directly correlated with their crystal habits. This correlation suggests that analysis of the energy framework serves as a useful tool (complementary to the earlier developed methods) to rationalize and predict the crystal habit. The X-ray structural analysis also revealed that the I⋯N distances in the complexes were in the 2.24–2.54 Å range, i.e. they were much closer to the I⋯N covalent bond length than to the van der Waals separation. The computational analysis of the nature of halogen bonding in these complexes showed delocalization of their molecular orbitals' between donor and acceptors resulting in a substantial charge transfer from the nucleophiles to dihalogens and elongation of the I⋯X bond. As a result, both I⋯N and I⋯X bonds in the strongest complexes ( e.g. , ICl with DABCO or 4-dimethylaminopyridine) are characterized by the comparable Mayer bonds orders of about 0.6, along with the electron and energy densities at their bond critical points of about 0.1 a.u. and −0.02 a.u., respectively. These data as well as the density overlap regions indicator (DORI) point to the covalency of the I⋯N bonding and suggest that the interaction within the IX complexes can be described as (unsymmetrical) hypervalent 3c/4e N⋯I⋯X bonding akin to that in trihalide or halonium ions. 
    more » « less
  6. Similarities and differences of halogen and hydrogen bonding were explored via UV–Vis and 1H NMR measurements, X-ray crystallography and computational analysis of the associations of CHX3 (X=I, Br, Cl) with aromatic (tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine) and aliphatic (4-diazabicyclo[2,2,2]octane) amines. When the polarization of haloforms was taken into account, the strengths of these complexes followed the same correlation with the electrostatic potentials on the surfaces of the interacting atoms. However, their spectral properties were quite distinct. While the halogen-bonded complexes showed new intense absorption bands in the UV–Vis spectra, the absorptions of their hydrogen-bonded analogues were close to the superposition of the absorption of reactants. Additionally, halogen bonding led to a shift in the NMR signal of haloform protons to lower ppm values compared with the individual haloforms, whereas hydrogen bonding of CHX3 with aliphatic amines resulted in a shift in the opposite direction. The effects of hydrogen bonding with aromatic amines on the NMR spectra of haloforms were ambivalent. Titration of all CHX3 with these nucleophiles produced consistent shifts in their protons’ signals to lower ppm values, whereas calculations of these pairs produced multiple hydrogen-bonded minima with similar structures and energies, but opposite directions of the NMR signals’ shifts. Experimental and computational data were used for the evaluation of formation constants of some halogen- and hydrogen-bonded complexes between haloforms and amines co-existing in solutions. 
    more » « less