Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 6 de 6
Filtrar
Más filtros

Banco de datos
Tipo del documento
Asunto de la revista
País de afiliación
Intervalo de año de publicación
1.
Chemistry ; 21(15): 5769-82, 2015 Apr 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25727401

RESUMEN

Fluoro- and perfluoralkylsulfonyl pentafluoroanilides [HN(C6F5)(SO2X); X = F, CF3, C4F9, C8F17] are a class of imides with two different strongly electron-withdrawing substituents attached to a nitrogen atom. They are NH acids, the unsymmetrical hybrids of the well-known symmetrical bissulfonylimides and bispentafluorophenylamine. The syntheses, the structures of these perfluoroanilides, their solvates, and some selected lithium salts give rise to a structural variety beyond the symmetrical parent compounds. The acidities of representative subsets of these novel NH acids have been investigated experimentally and quantum-chemically and their gas-phase acidities (GAs) are reported, as well as the pKa values of these compounds in acetonitrile (MeCN) and DMSO solution. In quantum chemical investigations with the vertical and relaxed COSMO cluster-continuum models (vCCC/rCCC), the unusual situation is encountered that the DMSO-solvated acid Me2SO-H-N(SO2CF3)2, optimized in the gas phase (vCCC model), dissociates to Me2SO-H(+)-N(SO2CF3)2(-) during structural relaxation and full optimization with the solvation model turned on (rCCC model). This proton transfer underlines the extremely high acidity of HN(SO2CF3)2. The importance of this effect is studied computationally in DMSO and MeCN solution. Usually this effect is less pronounced in MeCN and is of higher importance in the more basic solvent DMSO. Nevertheless, the neglect of the structural relaxation upon solvation causes typical changes in the computational pKa values of 1 to 4 orders of magnitude (4-20 kJ mol(-1)). The results provide evidence that the published experimental DMSO pKa value of HN(SO2CF3)2 should rather be interpreted as the pKa of a Me2SO-H(+)-N(SO2CF3)2(-) contact ion pair.

2.
Chemphyschem ; 16(7): 1428-39, 2015 May 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25853921

RESUMEN

Although receiving large interest over the last years, some fundamental aspects of Brønsted acidity in ionic liquids (ILs) have up to now been insufficiently highlighted. In this work, standard states, activity, and activity coefficient definitions for IL solvent systems were developed from general thermodynamic considerations and then extended to a general mixed solvent standard state. By using the bromide/bromoaluminate systems as representative ILs, formulae for thermodynamically consistent pH scales for ILs with simple (Br(-) ) and complex ([Aln Br3n+1 ](-) ) anions were derived on the basis of the chemical potential of the proton. Supported by quantum chemical [ccsd(t)/MP2/DFT/COSMO-RS] calculations, Gibbs solvation energies of the proton were calculated, which allowed the ILs to be ranked in absolute acidity, that is, pHabs or µabs (H(+) , IL), and additionally allowed their acidity to be compared with molecular Brønsted acid systems. It was shown that bromoaluminate ILs are suited for reaching superacidic conditions. The complexity of autoprotolysis processes in C6 MIM(+) [AlBr4 ](-) (C6 MIM=1-hexyl-3-methylimidazolium) with or without the addition of basic (i.e. Br(-) ) or acidic (AlBr3 and/or HBr) solutes was examined in detail by model calculations, and they indicated a large thermodynamic influence of small deviations from the exact stoichiometric composition.

3.
Chemistry ; 20(15): 4194-211, 2014 Apr 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24615801

RESUMEN

We introduce the protoelectric potential map (PPM) as a novel, two-dimensional plot of the absolute reduction potential (peabs scale) combined with the absolute protochemical potential (Brønsted acidity: pHabs scale). The validity of this thermodynamically derived PPM is solvent-independent due to the scale zero points, which were chosen as the ideal electron gas and the ideal proton gas at standard conditions. To tie a chemical environment to these reference states, the standard Gibbs energies for the transfer of the gaseous electrons/protons to the medium are needed as anchor points. Thereby, the thermodynamics of any redox, acid-base or combined system in any medium can be related to any other, resulting in a predictability of reactions even over different media or phase boundaries. Instruction is given on how to construct the PPM from the anchor points derived and tabulated with this work. Since efforts to establish "absolute" reduction potential scales and also "absolute" pH scales already exist, a short review in this field is given and brought into relation to the PPM. Some comments on the electrochemical validation and realization conclude this concept article.

4.
Chemistry ; 18(30): 9333-40, 2012 Jul 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22730176

RESUMEN

The capability of a gaseous Brønsted acid HB to deliver protons to a base is usually described by the gas-phase acidity (GA) value of the acid. However, GA values are standard Gibbs energy differences and refer to individual gas pressures of 1 bar for acid HB, base B(-), and proton H(+). We show that the GA value is not suited to describe the bulk acidity of a gaseous acid. Here the pressure dependence of the activities of HB, H(HB)(n)(+), and B(HB)(m)(-) that result from gaseous autoprotolysis have to be considered. In this work, the pressure-dependent absolute chemical potential of the proton in the representative gaseous proton acids CH(4), NH(3), H(2)O, HF, and HCl was worked out and the general theory to describe bulk gas phase acidity--that can directly be compared with solution acidity--was developed.

5.
Chemistry ; 17(21): 5808-26, 2011 May 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21542031

RESUMEN

The COSMO cluster-continuum (CCC) solvation model is introduced for the calculation of standard Gibbs solvation energies of protons. The solvation sphere of the proton is divided into an inner proton-solvent cluster with covalent interactions and an outer solvation sphere that interacts electrostatically with the cluster. Thus, the solvation of the proton is divided into two steps that are calculated separately: 1) The interaction of the proton with one or more solvent molecules is calculated in the gas phase with high-level quantum-chemical methods (modified G3 method). 2) The Gibbs solvation energy of the proton-solvent cluster is calculated by using the conductor-like screening model (COSMO). For every solvent, the solvation of the proton in at least two (and up to 11) proton-solvent clusters was calculated. The resulting Gibbs solvation energies of the proton were weighted by using Boltzmann statistics. The model was evaluated for the calculation of Gibbs solvation energies by using experimental data of water, MeCN, and DMSO as a reference. Allowing structural relaxation of the proton-solvent clusters and the use of structurally relaxed Gibbs solvation energies improved the accordance with experimental data especially for larger clusters. This variation is denoted as the relaxed COSMO cluster-continuum (rCCC) model, for which we estimate a 1σ error bar of 10 kJ mol(-1) . Gibbs solvation energies of protons in the following representative solvents were calculated: Water, acetonitrile, sulfur dioxide, dimethyl sulfoxide, benzene, diethyl ether, methylene chloride, 1,2-dichloroethane, sulfuric acid, fluorosulfonic acid, and hydrogen fluoride. The obtained values are absolute chemical standard potentials of the proton (pH=0 in this solvent). They are used to anchor the individual solvent specific acidity (pH) scales to our recently introduced absolute acidity scale.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA