Issue 13, 2009

Are the silyl group hydrogens in peri-substituted-9-silyltriptycenes engaged in blue-shifting hydrogen bonds?

Abstract

In three 9-silyltriptycenes bearing chlorine, bromine and the methyl group in one of the peri positions, the silyl group suffers extreme hindrance of its reorientational motion. Owing to this, separate signals of the individual silyl group protons could be observed in NMR spectra at relatively high temperatures. For each compound, the measured values of J couplings of these protons to the 29Si nucleus are strongly diversified, especially when a halogen atom occurs in the peri position. These differences can be qualitatively interpreted in terms of electron density transfers from the peri substituent, causing the individual Si–H bonds to differentiate. The stereoelectronic picture revealed by natural bond orbital analysis fits the pattern normally interpreted as that of the blue-shifting hydrogen bond. However, an essential similarity of the stereoelectronic effects for both the halogen and methyl substituents raises a serious question about the applicability of that concept to the present case.

Graphical abstract: Are the silyl group hydrogens in peri-substituted-9-silyltriptycenes engaged in blue-shifting hydrogen bonds?

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
01 Sep 2008
Accepted
13 Jan 2009
First published
11 Feb 2009

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2009,11, 2335-2338

Are the silyl group hydrogens in peri-substituted-9-silyltriptycenes engaged in blue-shifting hydrogen bonds?

T. Ratajczyk and S. Szymanski, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2009, 11, 2335 DOI: 10.1039/B815246B

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