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Fluoro‐ and Perfluoralkylsulfonylpentafluoroanilides: Synthesis and Characterization of NH Acids for Weakly Coordinating Anions and Their Gas‐Phase and Solution Acidities
Author(s) -
Kögel Julius F.,
Linder Thomas,
Schröder Fabian G.,
Sundermeyer Jörg,
Goll Sascha K.,
Himmel Daniel,
Krossing Ingo,
Kütt Karl,
Saame Jaan,
Leito Ivo
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.201405391
Subject(s) - chemistry , solvation , acetonitrile , solvent , quantum chemical , gas phase , computational chemistry , medicinal chemistry , molecule , organic chemistry
Fluoro‐ and perfluoralkylsulfonyl pentafluoroanilides [HN(C 6 F 5 )(SO 2 X); X=F, CF 3 , C 4 F 9 , C 8 F 17 ] are a class of imides with two different strongly electron‐withdrawing substituents attached to a nitrogen atom. They are NH acids, the unsymmetrical hybrids of the well‐known symmetrical bissulfonylimides and bispentafluorophenylamine. The syntheses, the structures of these perfluoroanilides, their solvates, and some selected lithium salts give rise to a structural variety beyond the symmetrical parent compounds. The acidities of representative subsets of these novel NH acids have been investigated experimentally and quantum‐chemically and their gas‐phase acidities (GAs) are reported, as well as the p K a values of these compounds in acetonitrile (MeCN) and DMSO solution. In quantum chemical investigations with the vertical and relaxed COSMO cluster‐continuum models (vCCC/rCCC), the unusual situation is encountered that the DMSO‐solvated acid Me 2 SO–H‐N(SO 2 CF 3 ) 2 , optimized in the gas phase (vCCC model), dissociates to Me 2 SO‐H + –N(SO 2 CF 3 ) 2 − during structural relaxation and full optimization with the solvation model turned on (rCCC model). This proton transfer underlines the extremely high acidity of HN(SO 2 CF 3 ) 2 . The importance of this effect is studied computationally in DMSO and MeCN solution. Usually this effect is less pronounced in MeCN and is of higher importance in the more basic solvent DMSO. Nevertheless, the neglect of the structural relaxation upon solvation causes typical changes in the computational p K a values of 1 to 4 orders of magnitude (4–20 kJ mol −1 ). The results provide evidence that the published experimental DMSO p K a value of HN(SO 2 CF 3 ) 2 should rather be interpreted as the p K a of a Me 2 SO‐H + –N(SO 2 CF 3 ) 2 − contact ion pair.