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Unraveling the acid-base characterization and solvent effects on the structural and electronic properties of a bis-bidentate bridging ligand.

Leandro Rezende FrancoKalil Cristhian Figueiredo ToledoTiago Araujo MatiasPaola Andrea BenavidesHenrique Musseli CezarCarlos Moyses AraujoKaline CoutinhoKoiti Araki
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2022)
Understanding the interactions and the solvent effects on the distribution of several species in equilibrium and how it can influence the 1 H-NMR properties, spectroscopy (UV-vis absorption), and the acid-base equilibria can be especially challenging. This is the case of a bis-bidentate bridging ligand bis(2-pyridyl)-benzo-bis(imidazole), where the two pyridyl and four imidazolyl nitrogen atoms can be protonated in different ways, depending on the solvent, generating many isomeric/tautomeric species. Herein, we report a combined theoretical-experimental approach based on a sequential quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics procedure that was successfully applied to describe in detail the acid-base characterization and its effects on the electronic properties of such a molecule in solution. The calculated free-energies allowed the identification of the main species present in solution as a function of the solvent polarity, and its effects on the magnetic shielding of protons ( 1 H-NMR chemical shifts), the UV-vis absorption spectra, and the acid-base equilibrium constants (p K a s) in aqueous solution. Three acid-base equilibrium constants were experimentally/theoretically determined (p K a 1 = 1.3/1.2, p K a 2 = 2.1/2.2 and p K a 5 = 10.1/11.3) involving mono-deprotonated and mono-protonated cis and trans species. Interestingly, other processes with p K a 3 = 3.7 and p K a 4 = 6.0 were also experimentally determined and assigned to the protonation and deprotonation of dimeric species. The dimerization of the most stable neutral species was investigated by Monte Carlo simulations and its electronic effects were considered for the elucidation of the UV-vis absorption bands, revealing transitions mainly with the charge-transfer characteristic and involving both the monomeric species and the dimeric species. The good matching of the theoretical and experimental results provides an atomistic insight into the solvent effects on the electronic properties of this bis-bidentate bridging ligand.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • aqueous solution
  • molecular dynamics
  • monte carlo
  • magnetic resonance
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • high resolution
  • genetic diversity
  • solid state
  • quantum dots
  • molecularly imprinted