An n→π* interaction reduces the electrophilicity of the acceptor carbonyl group.

Chem Commun (Camb)
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

Carbonyl-carbonyl (C=O···C'=O') interactions are ubiquitous in both small and large molecular systems. This interaction involves delocalization of a lone pair (n) of a donor oxygen into the antibonding orbital (π*) of an acceptor carbonyl group. Analyses of high-resolution protein structures suggest that these carbonyl-carbonyl interactions prefer to occur in pairs, that is, one donor per acceptor. Here, the reluctance of the acceptor carbonyl group (C'=O') to engage in more than one n→π* electron delocalization is probed using imidazolidine-based model systems with one acceptor carbonyl group and two equivalent donor carbonyl groups. The data indicate that the electrophilicity of the acceptor carbonyl group is reduced when it engages in n→π* electron delocalization. This diminished electrophilicity discourages a second n→π* interaction with the acceptor carbonyl group.

Year of Publication
2013
Journal
Chem Commun (Camb)
Volume
49
Issue
74
Pages
8166-8
Date Published
2013 Sep 25
ISSN
1364-548X
DOI
10.1039/c3cc44573a
PubMed ID
23928794
PubMed Central ID
PMC3840071
Links
Grant list
R01 AR044276 / AR / NIAMS NIH HHS / United States