Abstract

The condensation of the CH acidic heterocycles 4-alkyl-2,6-dioxo-1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyridine-3-carbonitrile (5a and b) and barbituric acid (15) with electron-rich thiophene aldehydes and benzaldehyde derivatives affords the respective monomethine dyes 10-13 and 17-19. The formylation of 5a,b and 15 with N,N'-diphenylformamidine or dibutylformamide in acetic anhydride and further reaction with 4-picolinium salts 9a,b provide the dimethine dyes 14 and 20a,b. Triple hydrogen bonding of the imide groups of merocyanine dyes 10-14 has been investigated by NMR titration experiments with melamine 21. Despite rather pronounced variations of the charge-transfer properties within the given series of dyes, minor changes of their binding constants have been observed. These results could be rationalized by semiempirical calculations that reveal small changes in the charge density at the oxygen functionalities involved in hydrogen bonding upon variation of the electron-donating carbocyclic or heterocyclic groups at the terminal double bond. Although the binding constants for triple hydrogen bonding between imides and melamines are rather weak in chloroform, they proved to be strong enough to facilitate dissolution of some of these dyes in aliphatic solvents by coordination to amphiphilic melamines and dipolar aggregation. UV-vis spectral changes observed in methylcyclohexane vs chloroform suggest the formation of colloidal assemblies through noncovalent polymerization.

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