Posts Tagged ‘perturbation energy’
Sunday, March 24th, 2019
There is a predilection amongst chemists for collecting records; one common theme is the length of particular bonds, either the shortest or the longest. A particularly baffling type of bond is that between the very electronegative F atom and an acid hydrogen atom such as that in OH. Thus short C-N…HO hydrogen bonds are extremely common, as are C-O…HO.‡ But F atoms in C-F bonds are largely thought to be inert to hydrogen bonding, as indicated by the use of fluorine in many pharmaceuticals as inert isosteres.[1] Here I do an up-to-date search of the CSD crystal structure database, which is now on the verge of accumulating 1 million entries, to see if any strong C-F…HO hydrogen bonding may have been recently discovered.
(more…)
References
-
S. Purser, P.R. Moore, S. Swallow, and V. Gouverneur, "Fluorine in medicinal chemistry", Chem. Soc. Rev., vol. 37, pp. 320-330, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/B610213C
Tags:Chemical bond, chemical bonding, Chemical elements, Chemistry, Fluorine, Hydrogen, Hydrogen bond, Intermolecular forces, Natural sciences, perturbation energy, pharmaceuticals, Physical sciences, Refrigerants, search parameters, search query, Supramolecular chemistry
Posted in crystal_structure_mining | No Comments »
Thursday, July 12th, 2012
Years ago, I was travelling from Cambridge to London on a train. I found myself sitting next to a chemist, and (as chemists do), he scribbled the following on a piece of paper. When I got to work the next day Vera (my student) was unleashed on the problem, and our thoughts were published[1]. That was then.
(more…)
References
-
M.S. Baird, J.R. Al Dulayymi, H.S. Rzepa, and V. Thoss, "An unusual example of stereoelectronic control in the ring opening of 3,3-disubstituted 1,2-dichlorocyclopropenes", Journal of the Chemical Society, Chemical Communications, pp. 1323, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/C39920001323
Tags:Cambridge, chemist, conformational analysis, free energy, Historical, Interesting chemistry, Internet era, London, pericyclic, perturbation energy, re-analysis using modern algorithms, Reaction Mechanism, Skolnik
Posted in reaction mechanism | 1 Comment »