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. 2010 Nov 19;75(22):7651-8.
doi: 10.1021/jo1014646. Epub 2010 Oct 18.

Hydrogen bonding between solutes in solvents octan-1-ol and water

Affiliations

Hydrogen bonding between solutes in solvents octan-1-ol and water

Michael H Abraham et al. J Org Chem. .

Abstract

The 1:1 equilibrium constants, K, for the association of hydrogen bond bases and hydrogen bond acids have been determined by using octan-1-ol solvent at 298 K for 30 acid-base combinations. The values of K are much smaller than those found for aprotic, rather nonpolar solvents. It is shown that the log K values can satisfactorily be correlated against α(H)2·β(H)2, where α(H)2 and β(H)2 are the 1:1 hydrogen bond acidities and basicities of solutes. The slope of the plot, 2.938, is much smaller than those for log K values in the nonpolar organic solvents previously studied. An analysis of literature data on 1:1 hydrogen bonding in water yields a negative slope for a plot of log K against α(H)2·β(H)2, thus showing how the use of very strong hydrogen bond acids and bases does not lead to larger values of log K for 1:1 hydrogen bonding in water. It is suggested that for simple 1:1 association between monofunctional solutes in water, log K cannot be larger than about -0.1 log units. Descriptors have been obtained for the complex between 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol and propanone, and used to analyze solvent effects on the two reactants, the complex, and the complexation constant.

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Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
A plot of log K for 1:1 association in octan-1-ol predicted on eq 8, against observed values of log K, from Table 3; the line is that of unit slope.

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References

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