scholarly journals Molecular Diffusivity of Click Reaction Components: The Diffusion Enhancement Question

Author(s):  
Nasrollah Rezaei-Ghaleh ◽  
Jaime Agudo-Canalejo ◽  
Christian Griesinger ◽  
Ramin Golestanian
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tian Huang ◽  
Bo Li ◽  
Huan Wang ◽  
Steve Granick

Bipolar reactions have been provoked by reports of boosted diffusion during chemical and enzymatic reactions. To some, it is intuitively reasonable that relaxation to truly Brownian motion after passing an activation barrier can be slow, but to others the notion is so intuitively unphysical that they suspect the supporting experiments to be artifact. Here we study a chemical reaction according to whose mechanism some intermediate species should speed up while others slow down in predictable ways, if the boosted diffusion interpretation holds. Experimental artifacts would do not know organic chemistry mechanism, however. Accordingly, we scrutinize the absolute diffusion coefficient (D) during intermediate stages of the CuAAC reaction (coppercatalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition click reaction), using proton pulsed field-gradient nuclear magnetic resonance (PFG-NMR) to discriminate between the diffusion of various reaction intermediates. For the azide reactant, its D increases during reaction, peaks at the same time as peak reaction rate, then returns to its initial value. For the alkyne reagent, its D decreases consistent with presence of the intermediate large complexes formed from copper catalyst and its ligand, except for the 2Cu-alk complex whose more rapid D may signify that this species is the real reactive complex. For the product of this reaction, its D increases slowly as it detaches from the triazolide catalyst complex. These examples of enhanced diffusion for some molecular species and depressed diffusion for others causes us to conclude that diffusion coefficients during these elementary reactions are influenced by two components: hydrodynamic radius increase from complex formation, which slows diffusion, and energy release rate during the chemical reaction, which speeds it up. We discuss possible mechanisms and highlight that too little is yet understood about slow solvent reorganization during chemical reactions.<br>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tian Huang ◽  
Bo Li ◽  
Huan Wang ◽  
Steve Granick

Bipolar reactions have been provoked by reports of boosted diffusion during chemical and enzymatic reactions. To some, it is intuitively reasonable that relaxation to truly Brownian motion after passing an activation barrier can be slow, but to others the notion is so intuitively unphysical that they suspect the supporting experiments to be artifact. Here we study a chemical reaction according to whose mechanism some intermediate species should speed up while others slow down in predictable ways, if the boosted diffusion interpretation holds. Experimental artifacts would do not know organic chemistry mechanism, however. Accordingly, we scrutinize the absolute diffusion coefficient (D) during intermediate stages of the CuAAC reaction (coppercatalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition click reaction), using proton pulsed field-gradient nuclear magnetic resonance (PFG-NMR) to discriminate between the diffusion of various reaction intermediates. For the azide reactant, its D increases during reaction, peaks at the same time as peak reaction rate, then returns to its initial value. For the alkyne reagent, its D decreases consistent with presence of the intermediate large complexes formed from copper catalyst and its ligand, except for the 2Cu-alk complex whose more rapid D may signify that this species is the real reactive complex. For the product of this reaction, its D increases slowly as it detaches from the triazolide catalyst complex. These examples of enhanced diffusion for some molecular species and depressed diffusion for others causes us to conclude that diffusion coefficients during these elementary reactions are influenced by two components: hydrodynamic radius increase from complex formation, which slows diffusion, and energy release rate during the chemical reaction, which speeds it up. We discuss possible mechanisms and highlight that too little is yet understood about slow solvent reorganization during chemical reactions.<br>


2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (8) ◽  
pp. 860-900 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chander P. Kaushik ◽  
Jyoti Sangwan ◽  
Raj Luxmi ◽  
Krishan Kumar ◽  
Ashima Pahwa

N-Heterocyclic compounds like 1,2,3-triazoles serve as a key scaffolds among organic compounds having diverse applications in the field of drug discovery, bioconjugation, material science, liquid crystals, pharmaceutical chemistry and solid phase organic synthesis. Various drugs containing 1,2,3-triazole ring which are commonly available in market includes Rufinamide, Cefatrizine, Tazobactam etc., Stability to acidic/basic hydrolysis along with significant dipole moment support triazole moiety for appreciable participation in hydrogen bonding and dipole-dipole interactions with biological targets. Huisgen 1,3-dipolar azide-alkyne cycloaddition culminate into a mixture of 1,4 and 1,5- disubstituted 1,2,3-triazoles. In 2001, Sharpless and Meldal came across with a copper(I) catalyzed regioselective synthesis of 1,4-disubstituted 1,2,3-triazoles by cycloaddition between azides and terminal alkynes. This azide-alkyne cycloaddition has been labelled as a one of the important key click reaction. Click synthesis describes chemical reactions that are simple to perform, gives high selectivity, wide in scope, fast reaction rate and high yields. Click reactions are not single specific reaction, but serve as a pathway for construction of simple to complex molecules from a variety of starting materials. In the last few decades, 1,2,3-triazoles attracted attention of researchers all over the world because of their broad spectrum of biological activities. Keeping in view the biological importance of 1,2,3-triazole, in this review we focus on the various synthetic routes for the syntheisis of 1,4-disubstituted 1,2,3-triazoles. This review involves various synthetic protocols which involves copper and non-copper catalysts, different solvents as well as substrates. It will boost synthetic chemists to explore new pathway for the development of newer biologically active 1,2,3-triazoles.


2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (10) ◽  
pp. 738-743 ◽  
Author(s):  
Azadeh Fazeli ◽  
Hossein Oskooie ◽  
Yahya Beheshtiha ◽  
Majid Heravi ◽  
Hassan Valizadeh

Author(s):  
Constantin Stuckhardt ◽  
Maren Wissing ◽  
Armido Studer
Keyword(s):  

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