Hailiang Zhao,
Shanshan Tang,
Qun Zhang and
Lin Du*
Environment Research Institute, Shandong University, Shanda South Road 27, 250100 Shandong, China. E-mail: lindu@sdu.edu.cn
First published on 24th April 2017
The weak intermolecular interaction between 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE) and 3-chloro-2-methyl-1-propene (CMP) has been investigated by gas phase FTIR spectroscopy and DFT calculations. CMP offers two hydrogen bond docking sites to the hydrogen bond donor: the chlorine atom (O–H⋯Cl) and the CC π electron system (O–H⋯π). DFT calculations suggest that MeOH approaches CMP in five different orientations. The structural, energetic, and spectroscopic parameters of the most stable structures in each orientation were studied, and their binding energies range from −25.5 to −19.5 kJ mol−1. The docking to the π system is at least 1 kJ mol−1 more favored than the docking to the chlorine atom. The equilibrium constant for complexation (2.3 × 10−2) was determined from the experimental and calculated intensity of the OH-stretching transition. The Gibbs free energy of formation was found to be 9.3 kJ mol−1. The nature of the non-covalent interaction was analyzed with the atoms in molecules (AIM) method.
A number of theoretical and experimental investigations have considered X–H⋯π hydrogen bonding interactions in a variety of different molecular systems.2–6 The hydrogen bonded methanol–ethene complex, the most elementary example of weak intermolecular alcohol hydrogen bonding to a π system, has been studied recently with FTIR spectroscopy.2 The quantitative insights into O–H⋯π interactions obtained for methanol–ethene can help to advance the understanding of pre-reaction complexes in olefin epoxidation,7 hydroxyl radical reactions,8 electric field effects in O–H⋯π contacts4 and the subtle donor–acceptor balance in methanol–ethyne.3 The O–H⋯Cl hydrogen bond is less well investigated than O–H⋯π. In a previous study, hydrogen-bonded complexes of methanol with different proton accepting and proton donating molecules containing Cl, F, NH2, OH, OR, and COOH functional groups have been modeled using DFT with hybrid B3LYP and M05-2X functionals, recommended for modeling of system in which weak dispersion interactions are important.9
The hydrogen bonding acceptor molecules have one more docking site in some cases, hereby, there is a competition between different docking sites. Much attention has been paid on such competition for various hydrogen bonded complexes recently. Methanol is shown to engage two nearly equivalent solvation sites in 2,5-dimethylfuran, the electron-rich π cloud and the electron-deficient oxygen site.10 The OH group of methanol prefers to coordinate a 2,5-dimethylfuran molecule at its oxygen site, but largely because the methyl group simultaneously solvates the aromatic ring. The competing π solvation by the OH group is only marginally less stable but shows a significantly larger bathochromic shift in the experimental infrared spectrum.10 Similarly, anisole also can offer two attractive hydrogen bond acceptor sites to an incoming hydrogen bond donor: its oxygen atom and its delocalized π electron system. Infrared absorption spectroscopy in the OH stretching fundamental range applied to a cold supersonic jet expansion of anisole and methanol in helium shows that the oxygen binding site is preferred.11 Subsequently, the effect of ring methylation on the methanol–anisole complex has been studied.12 The subtle balance between the two structures can be varied in supersonic jets by one order of magnitude through single to triple methylation of the aromatic ring and introduction of a single tert-butyl substituent, as evidenced by infrared spectroscopy. It is interesting to investigate the competition of two docking sites in one molecule.
3-Chloro-2-methyl-1-propene (CMP) is a chlorinated derivative of highly reactive isobutene, due to a non-symmetrical character and the induction effect of the methyl group which raises the electron density at the double bond.13 In the present study, we choose to study complexes of 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE) as the hydrogen bond donor and CMP as the hydrogen bond acceptor to investigate the competition between the weak interactions of O–H⋯π and O–H⋯Cl. Detection of weak interactions such as O–H⋯π and O–H⋯Cl typically relies on the sensitive vibrational signature of the donor OH bond and the spectroscopic “red shift” that usually accompanies bond formation. FTIR spectra of the TFE–CMP complex were measured in the gas phase at room temperature, and the investigation of the structural, energetic, and spectroscopic parameters of the hydrogen bonded complexes was carried out by DFT calculations. Quantum theory of atoms in molecules (AIM) analysis was performed to understand the nature of weak interactions in the TFE–CMP complex.
The chemicals were led into the glass cell on a vacuum line. In the experiments, the gas adsorption of TFE or CMP on the cell wall before measurement could reach 10%. The loss of chemicals during the process of preparing the gas mixture was another factor leading to the uncertainty on the pressures in the cell. Practically, a pressure “calibration” procedure was performed.14 We measured a pure TFE spectrum at a certain pressure (nominal) immediately after filling the vapor into the cell. In the spectral subtraction, a weighting factor was applied to the pure TFE spectrum so that the TFE transitions matched in regions where only TFE was absorbed. The product of the nominal TFE pressure to the weighting factor is the “real” TFE pressure in the cell. The pressures of CMP were also calibrated in this way. By doing this, the contribution of the TFE and CMP monomer spectrum can be completely cancelled from the spectrum of their mixture, and the residue spectrum is from the complex. The intensity enhancement of the OH-stretching fundamental in the complex makes it possible to observe the complex in the gas phase.
Hydrogen bonding competition occurs when the acceptor molecule has more than one docking site. Investigations of such competition can reveal the relative strength of the bonding abilities in the acceptor molecule. A competition between O–H⋯O and O–H⋯π docking sites has recently been reported for several hydrogen bonded complexes.22–25 The O–H⋯π docking is slightly more favored in supersonic jet expansions as compared with the O–H⋯O docking in the MeOH–anisole complex.23 However, O–H⋯O docking is preferred in the phenol–anisole and water–1,2-dimethoxybenzene.24,25 There are various ways where TFE can interact with CMP under consideration. One sort of interaction consists an O–H⋯π hydrogen bond in which the proton donating OH group approaches to the π system of the CC group: (1) TFE reaches the CC group on the same side as Cl in gauche-CMP (Fig. 2a); (2) TFE is close to the CC group on the opposite side as Cl in gauche-CMP (Fig. 2b); (3) TFE is towards to bonding the CC group in syn-CMP (Fig. 2d). The second sort of interaction, O–H⋯Cl, involves the approach of the OH group of TFE toward the Cl atom: (4) TFE approaches Cl in gauche-CMP (Fig. 2c); (5) TFE comes to Cl in syn-CMP (Fig. 2e). Only the most stable structures in each binding pattern are discussed, and other high-lying structures are provided in the ESI (Fig. S1†).
Fig. 2 The most stable structures of the TFE–CMP complexes obtained at the B3LYP-D3/aug-cc-pVTZ level. The dashed lines denote the O–H⋯π and O–H⋯Cl hydrogen bonds. |
Selected geometric parameters along with the changes in the OH and CC bond length upon complexation are given in Table 1. For an X–H proton donor molecule (X = a highly electronegative atom such as N, O, or F), the typical feature is the elongation of the X–H bond.26 The ΔrOH and ΔrCC data for the O–H⋯π and O–H⋯Cl hydrogen bonded structures (Table 1) are all positive, indicating elongation behavior.27 For ΔrOH, the values of the O–H⋯π and O–H⋯Cl structures are similar, and they are in the range of 0.0036 to 0.0054 Å. This is close to a previous study on the H2O–aromatic ring (benzene, phenol, indole, and imidazole) complexes, where the two molecules interact with each other via O–H⋯π hydrogen bonding interactions and the ΔrOH of the H2O molecule upon complexation was obtained at 0.0007–0.0048 Å (MP2/6-31+G**).26 However, the ΔrOH of the traditional O–H⋯O hydrogen bonds was calculated to be much larger at 0.0079–0.0131 Å (B3LYP-D3/aug-cc-pVTZ) in alcohol (MeOH, EtOH, TFE)–ethylene oxide (EO) complexes.21 The ΔrOH is the largest in TFE-gauche-CMP (b) upon complexation. Moreover, the CC bonds are also elongated by 0.0025 to 0.0035 Å for the formation of the O–H⋯π hydrogen bonded structures. The corresponding values for the O–H⋯Cl bonded structures are only about 0.0005 to 0.0007 Å. These results clearly imply that the O–H⋯π hydrogen bonding interactions have large influences on the CC bond. For reference, calculations at the MP2/aug-cc-pVTZ level predict similar geometries as B3LYP-D3 method, but with slightly larger ΔrOH values and smaller intermolecular hydrogen bond distances (see in ESI†).
Structures | O–H⋯π/Cl | CC | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
ΔrOHa | rHBb | θc | ΔrCCd | |
a ΔrOH = rcomplex − rmonomer, is the change in the OH bond length upon complexation.b Intermolecular hydrogen bond distance.c Intermolecular hydrogen bond angle.d ΔrCC = rcomplex − rmonomer, is the change in the CC bond length upon complexation. | ||||
TFE-gauche-CMP (a) | 0.0037 | — | — | 0.0025 |
TFE-gauche-CMP (b) | 0.0054 | — | — | 0.0031 |
TFE-gauche-CMP (c) | 0.0052 | 2.3675 | 150.2 | 0.0005 |
TFE-syn-CMP (d) | 0.0046 | — | — | 0.0035 |
TFE-syn-CMP (e) | 0.0036 | 2.4405 | 173.4 | 0.0007 |
The calculated BE, enthalpy of formation (ΔHθ298 K), and Gibbs free energy of formation (ΔGθ298 K) at the B3LYP-D3/aug-cc-pVTZ level for all structures are listed in Table 2. The calculated ZPVE could reach as large as 3.8 kJ mol−1. The BEs for the TFE–CMP structures are very close to each other. Complexes of t-butyl alcohol with cyclohexene, cyclopentene and norbornene were theoretically studied and the O–H⋯π hydrogen bonded complexes were found with BEs of −22.8 to −19.7 kJ mol−1 (B3LYP-D3/def2-TZVP).28 The BE of the O–H⋯π hydrogen bonded MeOH–ethene complex was calculated to be −11.0 kJ mol−1 (B2PLYP-D3BJ/VTZ).2 On the other hand, BE of the traditional O–H⋯O hydrogen bond was calculated to be −21.3 and −30.0 kJ mol−1 (B3LYP-D3/aug-cc-pVTZ) for MeOH–EO and TFE–EO (g), respectively.21 The traditional O–H⋯O hydrogen bond is stronger than the O–H⋯π hydrogen bond. The BEs indicate that TFE-gauche-CMP (Fig. 2a) is 2.8 kJ mol−1 more stable than the one on the opposite side as Cl (Fig. 2b), and only slightly more stable by 0.8 kJ mol−1 than the O–H⋯Cl TFE-gauche-CMP structure. The BEs demonstrate that the two TFE-syn-CMP structures are more stable than the three TFE-gauche-CMP structures. The O–H⋯π TFE-syn-CMP structure is also slightly more stable by 1.2 kJ mol−1 than the O–H⋯Cl TFE-syn-CMP. In either gauche-CMP or syn-CMP structures, we may notice that the O–H⋯π structure is more stable than the corresponding O–H⋯Cl structure. The MP2 calculated results show the same trend as the B3LYP-D3 method. The uncorrected BEs of MP2 are generally 3–5 kJ mol−1 more negative than the corresponding B3LYP-D3 values (see in ESI†).
Structures | Type | BEb | ZPVE | BSSE | ΔHθ298 K | ΔGθ298 K | Kcalceq |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a Obtained at the B3LYP-D3/aug-cc-pVTZ level; energies are in kJ mol−1.b BE corrected with ZPVE and BSSE. | |||||||
TFE-gauche-CMP (a) | O–H⋯π | −22.3 | 2.9 | 0.9 | −20.5 | 16.0 | 1.6 × 10−3 |
TFE-gauche-CMP (b) | O–H⋯π | −19.5 | 3.0 | 1.2 | −18.0 | 17.4 | 8.7 × 10−4 |
TFE-gauche-CMP (c) | O–H⋯Cl | −21.5 | 3.2 | 1.0 | −20.0 | 17.9 | 7.3 × 10−4 |
TFE-syn-CMP (d) | O–H⋯π | −25.5 | 3.8 | 1.1 | −24.5 | 16.1 | 1.5 × 10−3 |
TFE-syn-CMP (e) | O–H⋯Cl | −24.3 | 3.3 | 1.1 | −23.0 | 15.5 | 1.9 × 10−3 |
Fig. 3 Spectra of the TFE–CMP complex in the OH band region. A 6 m path length cell was used. (a) 18 Torr TFE + 28 Torr CMP; (b) 15 Torr TFE + 20 Torr CMP. |
The observed spectra for the TFE–CMP complex are in good agreement with previously published spectra of the TFE–EO and TFE–ethylene sulfide (ES) complexes.21 The red shift (Δ), an indication of the hydrogen bond strength, is obtained as the frequency difference between the associated and free OH-stretching vibrations. The observed OH-stretching fundamental transition frequencies of TFE and TFE–CMP were measured to be 3658 and 3606 cm−1, respectively. The red shift of the OH-stretching fundamental transition of TFE–CMP was obtained to be 52 cm−1. This result is in line with early studies of the O–H⋯π hydrogen bonding interactions: (i) the harmonic red shifts of the OH-stretching fundamental transition of t-butyl alcohol with cyclohexene, cyclopentene and norbornene were observed at 63 to 80 cm−1 in supersonic jet expansions;28 (ii) in an FTIR spectroscopic study of the MeOH–ethene complex, the red shift of the OH-stretching fundamental transition of MeOH was observed at 45 cm−1.2 As compared with the traditional O–H⋯O hydrogen bond, the red shift of the OH-stretching fundamental transition of TFE was observed at 155 cm−1 in TFE–EO (g) by FTIR.21 It shows that the traditional O–H⋯O hydrogen bond is stronger than the O–H⋯π hydrogen bond.
The calculated CC and OH-stretching fundamental transition frequencies and the red shifts of the TFE–CMP structures are summarized in Table 3. The increase of intensity (fD/fM) of both the O–H⋯π and O–H⋯Cl bonded conformers was calculated to be 6–8 times stronger than that of the monomer. The red shifts of the OH-stretching fundamental transition were calculated in the range of 85–126 cm−1. In the gauche-CMP structures, the red shift of the OH-stretching fundamental transition with respect to the monomer in O–H⋯π structure (TFE-gauche-CMP (b), 126 cm−1) is greater than that in O–H⋯Cl structure (TFE-gauche-CMP (c), 115 cm−1). The same trend was obtained for the syn-CMP structures. The results imply that the O–H⋯π hydrogen bond is stronger than O–H⋯Cl. Moreover, the CC stretching vibrational transitions of the O–H⋯π bonded TFE–CMP structures were calculated to be red shifted by 8–12 cm−1 with respect to the corresponding CMP monomer, which is similar with the CO stretching transition: red shifts of 21–34 cm−1 were observed between phenol derivatives and methyl acetate/methyl chloroacetate in carbon tetrachloride solution by FTIR spectroscopy.33 The red shifts are caused by electronic charge released from the CO bond to the hydrogen bond donor during the hydrogen bond formation.34 However, due to the very low intensity of the CC stretching vibrational band, it could not be recorded with FTIR in the present study.
Structures | Calculated O–H | Calculated CC | Observed O–H | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Δa | fD/fMb | Δa | fD/fMb | Δa | ||||
a Δ = monomer − complex.b fD/fM represents the increase of intensity due to the complex formation. | ||||||||
TFE-gauche-CMP (a) | 3714 | 90 | 6.1 | 1700 | 8 | 1.1 | 3606 | 52 |
TFE-gauche-CMP (b) | 3678 | 126 | 7.9 | 1697 | 10 | 1.4 | ||
TFE-gauche-CMP (c) | 3689 | 115 | 7.0 | 1706 | 2 | 0.9 | ||
TFE-syn-CMP (d) | 3689 | 114 | 7.8 | 1709 | 12 | 1.2 | ||
TFE-syn-CMP (e) | 3719 | 85 | 6.0 | 1719 | 3 | 0.9 |
(1) |
(2) |
The TFE-syn-CMP (d) structure (O–H⋯π) is the most stable one based on the binding energy. Its oscillator strength (7.09 × 10−5) was used to determine the pressures of complex. A plot of pcomplex against pTFE × pCMP is shown in Fig. 4. The equilibrium constant (Keq) for the TFE–CMP complex is obtained from the slope of the least-square fitting of these data. The measured Keq at room temperature for TFE–CMP is 2.3 × 10−2. This value is smaller than the previously reported thermodynamic equilibrium constants of the MeOH–EO, EtOH–EO, and TFE–EO complexes (2.7 × 10−2, 2.9 × 10−2, and 3.0 × 10−1, respectively) determined with the same approach.21 The Keq value reveals that the hydrogen bonding in the TFE–CMP complex is weaker than the alcohol–EO complexes. The calculated equilibrium constants are significantly underestimated as compared to the measured value. The calculated thermodynamic equilibrium constants are strongly functional dependent. For example, for TFE–EO (g), the predicated values are 2.7 × 10−3, 1.6 × 10−2, and 5.5 × 10−2 with B3LYP, ωB97X-D and B3LYP-D3, respectively.21 The Gibbs free energies of formation (ΔGθexpt) can be obtained according to eqn (1). The ΔGθexpt of TFE–CMP was obtained to be 9.3 kJ mol−1. The ΔGθ298 K values in Table 2 are slightly overestimated by several kJ mol−1.
Structures | Type | Δq(H) | ρ(BCP) | ∇2ρ(BCP) |
---|---|---|---|---|
TFE-gauche-CMP (a) | O–H⋯π | 0.013 | 0.0113 | 0.0446 |
TFE-gauche-CMP (b) | O–H⋯π | 0.018 | 0.0132 | 0.0496 |
TFE-gauche-CMP (c) | O–H⋯Cl | 0.028 | 0.0134 | 0.0645 |
TFE-syn-CMP (d) | O–H⋯π | 0.022 | 0.0128 | 0.0513 |
TFE-syn-CMP (e) | O–H⋯Cl | 0.018 | 0.0117 | 0.0547 |
Due to the interference of the CF3 group in TFE, several types of hydrogen bonds formed in the TFE–CMP structures: O–H⋯π, O–H⋯Cl, C–H⋯O and C–H⋯F. Consequently, the AIM analysis indicates the existence of RCPs in TFE–CMP, with the formation of a multi-membered ring. Furthermore, CCPs are formed by these hydrogen bonds with O–H⋯π and O–H⋯Cl as the dominant interactions. The remaining interactions are weak non-covalent interactions known as cooperative hydrogen bonding interactions, which play an important role in determining the structure and properties of materials.42,43 In general, the cooperative hydrogen bond interactions make positive contribution to stabilize the structures. The formation of RCPs and CCPs stabilizes the complexes.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c7ra00901a |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 |