Abstract

The hydride affinities of 80 various p- and o-quinones in DMSO solution were predicted by using B3LYP/6-311++G (2df,p)//B3LYP/6-31+G* and MP2/6-311++G**//B3LYP/6-31+G* methods, combined with the PCM cluster continuum model for the first time. The results show that the hydride affinity scale of the 80 quinones in DMSO ranges from -47.4 kcal/mol for 9,10-anthraquinone to -124.5 kcal/mol for 3,4,5,6-tetracyano-1,2-quinone. Such a long scale of the hydride affinities (-47.4 to -124.5 kcal/mol) indicates that the 80 quinones can form a large and useful library of organic oxidants, which can provide various organic hydride acceptors that the hydride affinities are known for chemists to choose in organic syntheses. By examining the effect of substituent on the hydride affinities of quinones, it is found that the hydride affinities of quinones in DMSO are linearly dependent on the sum of the Hammett substituent parameters sigma: DeltaGH-(Q) approximately -16.0Sigmasigmai - 70.5 (kcal/mol) for p-quinones and DeltaGH-(Q) approximately -16.2Sigmasigmai - 81.5 (kcal/mol) for o-quinones only if the substituents have no large electrostatic inductive effect and large ortho-effect. Study of the effect of the aromatic properties of quinone on the hydride affinities showed that the larger the aromatic system of quinone is, the smaller the hydride affinity of the quinone is, and the decrease of the hydride affinities is linearly to take place with the increase of the number of benzene rings in the molecule of quinones, from which the hydride affinities of aromatic quinones with multiple benzene rings can be predicted. By comparing the hydride affinities of p-quinones and the corresponding o-quinones, it is found that the hydride affinities of o-quinones are generally larger than those of the corresponding p-quinones by ca. 11 kcal/mol. Analyzing the effect of solvent on the hydride affinities of quinones showed that the effects of solvent (DMSO) on the hydride affinities of quinones are mainly dependent on the electrostatic interaction of the charged hydroquinone anions (QH-) with solvent (DMSO). All the information disclosed in this work should provide some valuable clues to chemists to choose suitable quinones or hydroquinones as efficient hydride acceptors or donors in organic syntheses and to predict the thermodynamics of hydride exchange between quinones and hydroquinones in DMSO solution.

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