Counterintuitive solvation effect of ionic-liquid/DMSO solvents on acidic C–H dissociation and insight into respective solvation†
Abstract
How would acidic bond dissociation be affected by adding a small quantity of a weakly polar ionic liquid IL (the “apparent” or “measured” dielectric constant ε of the IL is around 10–15) into a strongly polar molecular solvent (e.g., ε of DMSO: 46.5), or vice versa? The answer is blurred, because no previous investigation was reported in this regard. Toward this, we, taking various IL/DMSO mixtures as representatives, have thoroughly investigated the effects of the respective solvent in ionic–molecular binary systems on self-dissociation of C–H acid phenylmalononitrile PhCH(CN)2via pKa determination. As disclosed, in this category of binary media, (1) no linear correspondence exists between pKa and molar fractions of the respective solvent components; (2) only ∼1–2 mol% of weakly polar ILs in strongly polar DMSO make C–H bonds even more dissociative than in neat DMSO; (3) a small fraction of DMSO in ILs (<10 mol%) can dramatically ease acidic C–H-dissociation; and (4) while the DMSO fraction further increases, its acidifying effect becomes much attenuated. These findings, though maybe counterintuitive, have been rationalized on the basis of the precise pKa measurement of this work in relation to the respective roles of each solvent component in solvation.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Celebrating 100 Years of Chemistry at Nankai University