Abstract
Herein, it is shown how anion recognition in highly polar solvents by neutral metal-free receptors is feasible when multiple hydrogen bonding and anion-πinteractions are suitably combined. A neutral aromatic molecular tweezer functionalized with azo groups is shown to merge these two kinds of interactions in a unique system and its efficiency as an anion catcher in water is evaluated using first-principles quantum methods. Theoretical calculations unequivocally prove the high thermodynamic stability in water of a model anion, bromide, captured within the tweezer's cavity. Thus, static calculations indicate anion-tweezer interaction energies within the range of covalent or ionic bonds and stability constants in water of more than 10 orders of magnitude. First-principles molecular dynamics calculations also corroborate the stability through the time of the anion-tweezer complex in water. It shows that the anion is always found within the tweezer's cavity due to the combination of the tweezer-anion interactions plus a hydrogen bond between the anion and a water molecule that is inside the tweezer's cavity.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Queizán, M., Sánchez-Lozano, M., Mandado, M., & Hermida-Ramón, J. M. (2021). A Highly Efficient Neutral Anion Receptor in Polar Environments by Synergy of Anion-πInteractions and Hydrogen Bonding. Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling, 61(9), 4455–4461. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00595
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