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Title: An enthalpic scale of hydrogen-bond basicity. 3. Ammonia, primary, secondary, and tertiary amines. Author: Graton J, Berthelot M, Besseau F, Laurence C. Journal: J Org Chem; 2005 Sep 30; 70(20):7892-901. PubMed ID: 16277308. Abstract: A reliable enthalpic scale of hydrogen-bond acceptor strength (basicity) is built for aliphatic amines by means of a new infrared method, from the temperature variation of hydrogen-bond equilibrium constants. Enthalpies of hydrogen bonding to a reference hydrogen-bond acceptor, 4-fluorophenol, have been determined in CCl4 and/or C2Cl4 for ammonia and 68 primary, secondary, and tertiary amines. The scale spans from -23.8 kJ mol(-1) for i-Pr2NCH(Et)2 to -39.4 kJ mol(-1) for Et3N. This large variation is mainly explained by the basicity-enhancing electronic effects of alkyl groups, which can be overcompensated by dramatic basicity-decreasing steric effects. Relationships between DeltaH degrees and the change in electronic energy or the infrared shift of the OH stretching upon hydrogen bonding are studied and found useful in the prediction of the hydrogen bond enthalpies of amines with several hydrogen-bond acceptor sites. A careful statistical analysis of the enthalpy-entropy relationship shows an isoentropic tendency. The entropies of 65% of hydrogen-bonding reactions between aliphatic amines and 4-fluorophenol have a mean value of -55.1 +/- 4.2 J K(-1) mol(-1). Amines excluded from the isoentropic set are mainly severely hindered ones. The hydrogen-bond enthalpic scale can be useful in measuring the electrostatic character of Lewis bases.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]