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Cation-pi interactions of a thiocarbonyl group and a carbonyl group with a pyridinium nucleus.

Attractive interactions between a thiocarbonyl group and a pyridinium nucleus, and between a carbonyl group and a pyridinium nucleus have been proven by (1)H and (13)C NMR studies, UV-vis spectral analyses, and X-ray crystallographic analyses of nicotinic amides 1 and 3, and pyridinium salts 2 and 4. Comparison of the Deltadelta values, which are the differences in the chemical shifts with reference compounds 5 or 6, showed that the absolute Deltadelta values of 2 and 4 are much larger than those of 1 and 3. In the UV-vis spectra, the n-->pi absorption of the C=S group of 2a exhibited a significant blue shift in CHCl(3). X-ray crystallographic analysis of 1-4 clearly showed that the C=S group of 2a and the C=O group of 4 are very close to the pyridinium moiety compared to the case of 1 and 3. In addition, the X-ray crystal packing structure of 2a showed the C=S group is sandwiched between two pyridinium rings. These experimental results strongly suggested the existence of attractive (C=S)...Py(+) and (C=O)...Py(+) interactions in solution and in crystal. The optimized geometries of 1 and 2 calculated at the HF/6-311G level are in good agreement with their X-ray geometries. MP2/6-311G calculations for the model systems of pyridinium salts 2 and 4 predicted that the electrostatic and induction energies are the major source of the attractive interactions. Since the larger contribution of electrostatic and induction interactions are characteristic features of cation-pi interactions, the (C=S)...Py(+) and (C=O)...Py(+) interactions would be classified as a cation-pi interaction.[1]

References

  1. Cation-pi interactions of a thiocarbonyl group and a carbonyl group with a pyridinium nucleus. Yamada, S., Misono, T., Tsuzuki, S. J. Am. Chem. Soc. (2004) [Pubmed]
 
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