Abstract
A combined gas-phase electron diffraction/mass-spectrometric and quantum chemical (B3LYP/cc-pVTZ, MP2/cc-pVTZ) study of the molecular structures of para-methylbenzenesulfonic acid (4-MBSA) and meta-nitrobenzenesulfonic acid (3-NBSA) was carried out. On the basis of mass spectrometric analysis, it was found that the substituted benzenesulfonic acids are thermostable at least up to 431(3) K. The fragmentations of 4-MBSA and 3-NBSA molecules under electron impact were analyzed. Quantum chemical calculations show that the 4-MBSA molecule exists as an enantiomeric pair, which is formed as a result of rotation of OH group about the S–O(H) bond. The 3-NBSA molecule has two conformers with different orientations of the O–H bond with respect to the nitro group and two corresponding enantiomers. The equilibrium configurations of 4-MBSA and both conformers of 3-NBSA have similar structures of the SO3H group, with the O–H bond eclipsing one of the S=O bonds. Selected experimental bond distances for 4-MBSA/3-NBSA are (A) rh1(C–C)av = 1.403(3)/1.395(4); rh1(C–S) = 1.765(5)/1.784(5); rh1(S=O)av = 1.433(4)/1.438(4); and rh1(S–O) = 1.618(4)/1.620(4). The potential functions for the internal rotation of SO3H, OH, and CH3 or NO2 groups were calculated, and the transition states between enantiomers (conformers) were determined. The influence of substituent's nature on molecular geometry as well as on the energies of frontier orbitals and red-ox properties of the compounds is discussed. The inductive and mesomeric substituent effects were estimated from the donor–acceptor interaction energies of the natural bond orbitals of substituent and benzene frame. The correlation between group electronegativities and cooperative energetic characteristics of inductive and mesomeric effects of substituents is shown.
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