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The impact of environment and resonance effects on the site of protonation of aminobenzoic acid derivatives
- Source :
- Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- The charge distribution in a molecule is crucial in determining its physical and chemical properties. Aminobenzoic acid derivatives are biologically active small molecules, which have two possible protonation sites: the amine (N-protonation) and the carbonyl oxygen (O-protonation). Here, we employ gas-phase infrared spectroscopy in combination with ion mobility-mass spectrometry and density functional theory calculations to unambiguously determine the preferred protonation sites of p-, m-, and o-isomers of aminobenzoic acids as well as their ethyl esters. The results show that the site of protonation does not only depend on the intrinsic molecular properties such as resonance effects, but also critically on the environment of the molecules. In an aqueous environment, N-protonation is expected to be lowest in energy for all species investigated here. In the gas phase, O-protonation can be preferred, and in those cases, both N- and O-protonated species are observed. To shed light on a possible proton migration pathway, the protonated molecule-solvent complex as well as proton-bound dimers are investigated.
- Subjects :
- Nuclear Theory
010401 analytical chemistry
General Physics and Astronomy
Infrared spectroscopy
Protonation
010402 general chemistry
Resonance (chemistry)
Photochemistry
01 natural sciences
Small molecule
0104 chemical sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
chemistry
Physics::Accelerator Physics
Molecule
Aminobenzoic acid
Density functional theory
Amine gas treating
Physics::Chemical Physics
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Nuclear Experiment
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a477866c044b82526d46c5df1fd6d4a0