화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.138, No.40, 13314-13325, 2016
Hydrogen-Bonded Homoleptic Fluoride-Diarylurea Complexes: Structure, Reactivity, and Coordinating Power
Hydrogen bonding with fluoride is a key interaction encountered when analyzing the mode of action of 5'-fluoro-5'-deoxyadenosine synthase, the only known enzyme capable of catalyzing the formation of a C-F bond from F-. Further understanding of the effect of hydrogen bonding on the structure and reactivity of complexed fluoride is therefore important for catalysis and numerous other applications, such as anion supramolecular chemistry. Herein we disclose a detailed study examining the structure of 18 novel urea fluoride complexes in the solid state, by X-ray and neutron diffraction, and in solution phase and explore the reactivity of these complexes as a fluoride source in S(N)2 chemistry. Experimental data show that the Structure, coordination strength, and reactivity of the urea fluoride complexes are tunable by modifying substituents on the urea receptor. Hammett analysis of aryl groups on the urea indicates that fluoride binding is dependent on sigma(p) and sigma(m) parameters with stronger binding being observed for electron-deficient urea ligands. For the first time, defined urea fluoride complexes are used as fluoride binding reagents for the nucleophilic substitution of a model alkyl bromide. The reaction is slower in comparison with known alcohol fluoride complexes, but S(N)2 is largely favored over E2, at a ratio surpassing all hydrogen-bonded complexes documented in the literature for the model alkyl bromide employed. Increased second-order rate constants at higher dilution support the hypothesis that the reactive species is a 1:1 urea-fluoride complex of type [UF](-) (U = urea) resulting from partial dissociation of the parent compound [U2F](-). The dissociation processes can be quantified through a combination of UV and NMR assays, including DOSY and HOESY analyses that illuminate the complexation state and H-bonding in solution.