We will be undertaking essential maintenance work on Apollo's infrastructure on Thursday 14 August and Friday 15 August, therefore expect intermittent access to Apollo's content and search interface during that time. Please also note that Apollo's "Request a copy" service will be temporarily disabled while we undertake this work.
Repository logo
 

Solvation-Enhanced Salt Bridges.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Change log

Authors

Abstract

Salt bridges formed by amidines and carboxylic acids represent an important class of noncovalent interaction in biomolecular and supramolecular systems. Isothermal titration calorimetry was used to study the relationships between the strength of the interaction, the chemical structures of the components, and the nature of the solvent. The stability of the 1:1 complex formed in chloroform changed by 2 orders of magnitude depending on the basicity of the amidine and the acidity of the acid, which is consistent with proton transfer in the complex. Polar solvents reduce the stabilities of salt bridges formed with N,N'-dialkylamidines by up to 3 orders of magnitude, but this dependence on solvent polarity can be eliminated if the alkyl groups are replaced by protons in the parent amidine. The enhanced stability of the complex formed by benzamidine is due to solvation of the NH sites not directly involved in salt bridge formation, which become significantly more polar when proton transfer takes place, leading to more favorable interactions with polar solvents in the bound state. Calculation of H-bond parameters using density functional theory was used to predict solvent effects on the stabilities of salt bridges to within 1 kJ mol-1. While H-bonding interactions are strong in nonpolar solvents, and solvophobic interactions are strong in polar protic solvents, these interactions are weak in polar aprotic solvents. In contrast, amidinium-carboxylate salt bridges are stable in both polar and nonpolar aprotic solvents, which is attractive for the design of supramolecular systems that operate in different solvent environments.

Description

Keywords

Journal Title

J Am Chem Soc

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0002-7863
1520-5126

Volume Title

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
Herchel Smith Fund