6533b82bfe1ef96bd128cdc1

RESEARCH PRODUCT

CH-Directed Anion-π Interactions in the Crystals of Pentafluorobenzyl-Substituted Ammonium and Pyridinium Salts

Michael MüllerMarkus AlbrechtKari RissanenOlga MergelArto Valkonen

subject

AnionsHydrocarbons FluorinatedInorganic chemistryChemieMolecular ConformationSalt (chemistry)Pyridinium CompoundsCrystallography X-RayMedicinal chemistryCatalysischemistry.chemical_compoundBromideHexafluorophosphatePyridineAmmoniumPi interactionchemistry.chemical_classificationMolecular StructureChemistryHydrogen bondOrganic ChemistryHydrogen BondingGeneral ChemistryCarbonQuaternary Ammonium CompoundsModels ChemicalSaltsPyridinium

description

Simple pentafluorobenzyl-substituted ammonium and pyridinium salts with different anions can be easily obtained by treatment of the parent amine or pyridine with the respective pentafluorobenzyl halide. Hexafluorophosphate is introduced as the anion by salt metathesis. In the case of the ammonium salt 4, water co-crystallisation seems to suppress effective anion-pi interactions of bromide with the electron-deficient aromatic system, whereas with salts 5 and 6 such interactions are observed despite the presence of water. However, due to asymmetric hydrogen-bonding interactions with ammonium side chains, the anion of 5 is located close to the rim of the pentafluorophenyl group (eta(1) interaction). In 6 the CH-anion hydrogen bonding is more symmetric and fixes the anion on top of the ring (eta(6)). A similar structure-controlling effect is observed in case of the 1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane derivatives 7. Here the position of the anion (Cl, Br, I) is shifted according to the length of the weak CH-halide interaction. The hexafluorophosphate 7 d reveals that this "non-coordinating" anion can be located on top of an aromatic pi system. In the methyl-substituted pyridinium salts 9 and 10 different locations of the bromide anions with respect to the pi system are observed. This is due to different conformations of the mono- versus disubstituted pyridine, which leads to different directions of the weak, but structurally important, H(Me)-Br bonds.

https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.200903016