Noncovalent Modulation of Chemoselectivity in the Gas Phase Leads to a Switchover in Reaction Type from Heterolytic to Homolytic to Electrocyclic Cleavage

Author:

Moorthy Suresh1,Lambert Hugues12ORCID,Mohan Neetha1ORCID,Schwarzlose Thomas3,Nau Werner M.3ORCID,Kalenius Elina4ORCID,Lee Tung‐Chun12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Materials Discovery University College London (UCL) London WC1H 0AJ UK

2. Department of Chemistry University College London (UCL) London WC1H 0AJ UK

3. School of Science Constructor University 28759 Bremen Germany

4. Department of Chemistry University of Jyväskylä Jyväskylä Finland

Abstract

AbstractIn the gas phase, thermal activation of supramolecular assemblies such as host–guest complexes leads commonly to noncovalent dissociation into the individual components. Chemical reactions, for example of encapsulated guest molecules, are only found in exceptional cases. As observed by mass spectrometry, when 1‐amino‐methyl‐2,3‐diazabicyclo[2.2.2]oct‐2‐ene (DBOA) is complexed by the macrocycle β‐cyclodextrin, its protonated complex undergoes collision‐induced dissociation into its components, the conventional reaction pathway. Inside the macrocyclic cavity of cucurbit[7]uril (CB7), a competitive chemical reaction of monoprotonated DBOA takes place upon thermal activation, namely a stepwise homolytic covalent bond cleavage with the elimination of N2, while the doubly protonated CB7⋅DBOA complex undergoes an inner‐phase elimination of ethylene, a concerted, electrocyclic ring‐opening reaction. These chemical reaction pathways stand in contrast to the gas‐phase chemistry of uncomplexed monoprotonated DBOA, for which an elimination of NH3 predominates upon collision‐induced activation, as a heterolytic bond cleavage reaction. The combined results, which can be rationalized in terms of organic‐chemical reaction mechanisms and density‐function theoretical calculations, demonstrate that chemical reactions in the gas phase can be steered chemoselectively through noncovalent interactions.

Funder

Leverhulme Trust

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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