fbpx
Wikipedia

Hydrogen bond

In chemistry, a hydrogen bond (or H-bond) is primarily an electrostatic force of attraction between a hydrogen (H) atom which is covalently bonded to a more electronegative "donor" atom or group (Dn), and another electronegative atom bearing a lone pair of electrons—the hydrogen bond acceptor (Ac). Such an interacting system is generally denoted Dn−H···Ac, where the solid line denotes a polar covalent bond, and the dotted or dashed line indicates the hydrogen bond.[5] The most frequent donor and acceptor atoms are the period 2 elements nitrogen (N), oxygen (O), and fluorine (F).

Model of hydrogen bonds (1) between molecules of water
AFM image of naphthalenetetracarboxylic diimide molecules on silver-terminated silicon, interacting via hydrogen bonding, taken at 77 K.[1] ("Hydrogen bonds" in the top image are exaggerated by artifacts of the imaging technique.[2][3][4])

Hydrogen bonds can be intermolecular (occurring between separate molecules) or intramolecular (occurring among parts of the same molecule).[6][7][8][9] The energy of a hydrogen bond depends on the geometry, the environment, and the nature of the specific donor and acceptor atoms and can vary between 1 and 40 kcal/mol.[10] This makes them somewhat stronger than a van der Waals interaction, and weaker than fully covalent or ionic bonds. This type of bond can occur in inorganic molecules such as water and in organic molecules like DNA and proteins. Hydrogen bonds are responsible for holding materials such as paper and felted wool together, and for causing separate sheets of paper to stick together after becoming wet and subsequently drying.

The hydrogen bond is also responsible for many of the physical and chemical properties of compounds of N, O, and F that seem unusual compared with other similar structures. In particular, intermolecular hydrogen bonding is responsible for the high boiling point of water (100 °C) compared to the other group-16 hydrides that have much weaker hydrogen bonds.[11] Intramolecular hydrogen bonding is partly responsible for the secondary and tertiary structures of proteins and nucleic acids.

Bonding edit

 
An example of intermolecular hydrogen bonding in a self-assembled dimer complex.[12] The hydrogen bonds are represented by dotted lines.
 
Intramolecular hydrogen bonding in acetylacetone helps stabilize the enol tautomer.

Definitions and general characteristics edit

In a hydrogen bond, the electronegative atom not covalently attached to the hydrogen is named the proton acceptor, whereas the one covalently bound to the hydrogen is named the proton donor. This nomenclature is recommended by the IUPAC.[5] The hydrogen of the donor is protic and therefore can act as a Lewis acid and the acceptor is the Lewis base. Hydrogen bonds are represented as H···Y system, where the dots represent the hydrogen bond. Liquids that display hydrogen bonding (such as water) are called associated liquids.[citation needed]

 
Examples of hydrogen bond donating (donors) and hydrogen bond accepting groups (acceptors)
 
Cyclic dimer of acetic acid; dashed green lines represent hydrogen bonds

Hydrogen bonds arise from a combination of electrostatics (multipole-multipole and multipole-induced multipole interactions), covalency (charge transfer by orbital overlap), and dispersion (London forces).[5]

In weaker hydrogen bonds,[13] hydrogen atoms tend to bond to elements such as sulfur (S) or chlorine (Cl); even carbon (C) can serve as a donor, particularly when the carbon or one of its neighbors is electronegative (e.g., in chloroform, aldehydes and terminal acetylenes).[14][15] Gradually, it was recognized that there are many examples of weaker hydrogen bonding involving donor other than N, O, or F and/or acceptor Ac with electronegativity approaching that of hydrogen (rather than being much more electronegative). Although weak (≈1 kcal/mol), "non-traditional" hydrogen bonding interactions are ubiquitous and influence structures of many kinds of materials.[citation needed]

The definition of hydrogen bonding has gradually broadened over time to include these weaker attractive interactions. In 2011, an IUPAC Task Group recommended a modern evidence-based definition of hydrogen bonding, which was published in the IUPAC journal Pure and Applied Chemistry. This definition specifies:

The hydrogen bond is an attractive interaction between a hydrogen atom from a molecule or a molecular fragment X−H in which X is more electronegative than H, and an atom or a group of atoms in the same or another molecule, in which there is evidence of bond formation.[16]

Bond strength edit

Hydrogen bonds can vary in strength from weak (1–2 kJ/mol) to strong (161.5 kJ/mol in the bifluoride ion, HF2).[17][18] Typical enthalpies in vapor include:[19]

  • F−H···:F (161.5 kJ/mol or 38.6 kcal/mol), illustrated uniquely by HF2
  • O−H···:N (29 kJ/mol or 6.9 kcal/mol), illustrated water-ammonia
  • O−H···:O (21 kJ/mol or 5.0 kcal/mol), illustrated water-water, alcohol-alcohol
  • N−H···:N (13 kJ/mol or 3.1 kcal/mol), illustrated by ammonia-ammonia
  • N−H···:O (8 kJ/mol or 1.9 kcal/mol), illustrated water-amide
  • OH+3···:OH2 (18 kJ/mol[20] or 4.3 kcal/mol)

The strength of intermolecular hydrogen bonds is most often evaluated by measurements of equilibria between molecules containing donor and/or acceptor units, most often in solution.[21] The strength of intramolecular hydrogen bonds can be studied with equilibria between conformers with and without hydrogen bonds. The most important method for the identification of hydrogen bonds also in complicated molecules is crystallography, sometimes also NMR-spectroscopy. Structural details, in particular distances between donor and acceptor which are smaller than the sum of the van der Waals radii can be taken as indication of the hydrogen bond strength. One scheme gives the following somewhat arbitrary classification: those that are 15 to 40 kcal/mol, 5 to 15 kcal/mol, and >0 to 5 kcal/mol are considered strong, moderate, and weak, respectively.[18]

Hydrogen bonds involving C-H bonds are both very rare and weak.[22]

Resonance assisted hydrogen bond edit

The resonance assisted hydrogen bond (commonly abbreviated as RAHB) is a strong type of hydrogen bond. It is characterized by the π-delocalization that involves the hydrogen and cannot be properly described by the electrostatic model alone. This description of the hydrogen bond has been proposed to describe unusually short distances generally observed between O=C−OH··· or ···O=C−C=C−OH.[23]

Structural details edit

The X−H distance is typically ≈110 pm, whereas the H···Y distance is ≈160 to 200 pm. The typical length of a hydrogen bond in water is 197 pm. The ideal bond angle depends on the nature of the hydrogen bond donor. The following hydrogen bond angles between a hydrofluoric acid donor and various acceptors have been determined experimentally:[24]

Acceptor···donor VSEPR geometry Angle (°)
HCN···HF linear 180
H2CO···HF trigonal planar 120
H2O···HF pyramidal 46
H2S···HF pyramidal 89
SO2···HF[verification needed] trigonal 142

Spectroscopy edit

Strong hydrogen bonds are revealed by downfield shifts in the 1H NMR spectrum. For example, the acidic proton in the enol tautomer of acetylacetone appears at   15.5, which is about 10 ppm downfield of a conventional alcohol.[25]

In the IR spectrum, hydrogen bonding shifts the X−H stretching frequency to lower energy (i.e. the vibration frequency decreases). This shift reflects a weakening of the X−H bond. Certain hydrogen bonds - improper hydrogen bonds - show a blue shift of the X−H stretching frequency and a decrease in the bond length.[26] H-bonds can also be measured by IR vibrational mode shifts of the acceptor. The amide I mode of backbone carbonyls in α-helices shifts to lower frequencies when they form H-bonds with side-chain hydroxyl groups.[27] The dynamics of hydrogen bond structures in water can be probed by this OH stretching vibration.[28] In the hydrogen bonding network in protic organic ionic plastic crystals (POIPCs), which are a type of phase change material exhibiting solid-solid phase transitions prior to melting, variable-temperature infrared spectroscopy can reveal the temperature dependence of hydrogen bonds and the dynamics of both the anions and the cations.[29] The sudden weakening of hydrogen bonds during the solid-solid phase transition seems to be coupled with the onset of orientational or rotational disorder of the ions.[29]

Theoretical considerations edit

Hydrogen bonding is of persistent theoretical interest.[30] According to a modern description O:H−O integrates both the intermolecular O:H lone pair ":" nonbond and the intramolecular H−O polar-covalent bond associated with O−O repulsive coupling.[31]

Quantum chemical calculations of the relevant interresidue potential constants (compliance constants) revealed[how?] large differences between individual H bonds of the same type. For example, the central interresidue N−H···N hydrogen bond between guanine and cytosine is much stronger in comparison to the N−H···N bond between the adenine-thymine pair.[32]

Theoretically, the bond strength of the hydrogen bonds can be assessed using NCI index, non-covalent interactions index, which allows a visualization of these non-covalent interactions, as its name indicates, using the electron density of the system.[citation needed]

Interpretations of the anisotropies in the Compton profile of ordinary ice claim that the hydrogen bond is partly covalent.[33] However, this interpretation was challenged.[34]

Most generally, the hydrogen bond can be viewed as a metric-dependent electrostatic scalar field between two or more intermolecular bonds. This is slightly different from the intramolecular bound states of, for example, covalent or ionic bonds. However, hydrogen bonding is generally still a bound state phenomenon, since the interaction energy has a net negative sum. The initial theory of hydrogen bonding proposed by Linus Pauling suggested that the hydrogen bonds had a partial covalent nature. This interpretation remained controversial until NMR techniques demonstrated information transfer between hydrogen-bonded nuclei, a feat that would only be possible if the hydrogen bond contained some covalent character.[35]

History edit

The concept of hydrogen bonding once was challenging.[36] Linus Pauling credits T. S. Moore and T. F. Winmill with the first mention of the hydrogen bond, in 1912.[37][38] Moore and Winmill used the hydrogen bond to account for the fact that trimethylammonium hydroxide is a weaker base than tetramethylammonium hydroxide. The description of hydrogen bonding in its better-known setting, water, came some years later, in 1920, from Latimer and Rodebush.[39] In that paper, Latimer and Rodebush cited the work of a fellow scientist at their laboratory, Maurice Loyal Huggins, saying, "Mr. Huggins of this laboratory in some work as yet unpublished, has used the idea of a hydrogen kernel held between two atoms as a theory in regard to certain organic compounds."

Hydrogen bonds in small molecules edit

 
Crystal structure of hexagonal ice. Gray dashed lines indicate hydrogen bonds
 
Structure of nickel bis(dimethylglyoximate), which features two linear hydrogen-bonds.

Water edit

An ubiquitous example of a hydrogen bond is found between water molecules. In a discrete water molecule, there are two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. The simplest case is a pair of water molecules with one hydrogen bond between them, which is called the water dimer and is often used as a model system. When more molecules are present, as is the case with liquid water, more bonds are possible because the oxygen of one water molecule has two lone pairs of electrons, each of which can form a hydrogen bond with a hydrogen on another water molecule. This can repeat such that every water molecule is H-bonded with up to four other molecules, as shown in the figure (two through its two lone pairs, and two through its two hydrogen atoms). Hydrogen bonding strongly affects the crystal structure of ice, helping to create an open hexagonal lattice. The density of ice is less than the density of water at the same temperature; thus, the solid phase of water floats on the liquid, unlike most other substances.[citation needed]

Liquid water's high boiling point is due to the high number of hydrogen bonds each molecule can form, relative to its low molecular mass. Owing to the difficulty of breaking these bonds, water has a very high boiling point, melting point, and viscosity compared to otherwise similar liquids not conjoined by hydrogen bonds. Water is unique because its oxygen atom has two lone pairs and two hydrogen atoms, meaning that the total number of bonds of a water molecule is up to four.[citation needed]

The number of hydrogen bonds formed by a molecule of liquid water fluctuates with time and temperature.[40] From TIP4P liquid water simulations at 25 °C, it was estimated that each water molecule participates in an average of 3.59 hydrogen bonds. At 100 °C, this number decreases to 3.24 due to the increased molecular motion and decreased density, while at 0 °C, the average number of hydrogen bonds increases to 3.69.[40] Another study found a much smaller number of hydrogen bonds: 2.357 at 25 °C.[41] Defining and counting the hydrogen bonds is not straightforward however.

Because water may form hydrogen bonds with solute proton donors and acceptors, it may competitively inhibit the formation of solute intermolecular or intramolecular hydrogen bonds. Consequently, hydrogen bonds between or within solute molecules dissolved in water are almost always unfavorable relative to hydrogen bonds between water and the donors and acceptors for hydrogen bonds on those solutes.[42] Hydrogen bonds between water molecules have an average lifetime of 10−11 seconds, or 10 picoseconds.[43]

Bifurcated and over-coordinated hydrogen bonds in water edit

A single hydrogen atom can participate in two hydrogen bonds. This type of bonding is called "bifurcated" (split in two or "two-forked"). It can exist, for instance, in complex organic molecules.[44] It has been suggested that a bifurcated hydrogen atom is an essential step in water reorientation.[45]

Acceptor-type hydrogen bonds (terminating on an oxygen's lone pairs) are more likely to form bifurcation (it is called overcoordinated oxygen, OCO) than are donor-type hydrogen bonds, beginning on the same oxygen's hydrogens.[46]

Other liquids edit

For example, hydrogen fluoride—which has three lone pairs on the F atom but only one H atom—can form only two bonds; (ammonia has the opposite problem: three hydrogen atoms but only one lone pair).

 

Further manifestations of solvent hydrogen bonding edit

  • Increase in the melting point, boiling point, solubility, and viscosity of many compounds can be explained by the concept of hydrogen bonding.
  • Negative azeotropy of mixtures of HF and water.
  • The fact that ice is less dense than liquid water is due to a crystal structure stabilized by hydrogen bonds.
  • Dramatically higher boiling points of NH3, H2O, and HF compared to the heavier analogues PH3, H2S, and HCl, where hydrogen-bonding is absent.
  • Viscosity of anhydrous phosphoric acid and of glycerol.
  • Dimer formation in carboxylic acids and hexamer formation in hydrogen fluoride, which occur even in the gas phase, resulting in gross deviations from the ideal gas law.
  • Pentamer formation of water and alcohols in apolar solvents.

Hydrogen bonds in polymers edit

Hydrogen bonding plays an important role in determining the three-dimensional structures and the properties adopted by many proteins. Compared to the C−C, C−O, and C−N bonds that comprise most polymers, hydrogen bonds are far weaker, perhaps 5%. Thus, hydrogen bonds can be broken by chemical or mechanical means while retaining the basic structure of the polymer backbone. This hierarchy of bond strengths (covalent bonds being stronger than hydrogen-bonds being stronger than van der Waals forces) is relevant in the properties of many materials.[47]

DNA edit

 
The structure of part of a DNA double helix
 
Hydrogen bonding between guanine and cytosine, one of two types of base pairs in DNA

In these macromolecules, bonding between parts of the same macromolecule cause it to fold into a specific shape, which helps determine the molecule's physiological or biochemical role. For example, the double helical structure of DNA is due largely to hydrogen bonding between its base pairs (as well as pi stacking interactions), which link one complementary strand to the other and enable replication.[citation needed]

Proteins edit

In the secondary structure of proteins, hydrogen bonds form between the backbone oxygens and amide hydrogens. When the spacing of the amino acid residues participating in a hydrogen bond occurs regularly between positions i and i + 4, an alpha helix is formed. When the spacing is less, between positions i and i + 3, then a 310 helix is formed. When two strands are joined by hydrogen bonds involving alternating residues on each participating strand, a beta sheet is formed. Hydrogen bonds also play a part in forming the tertiary structure of protein through interaction of R-groups. (See also protein folding).

Bifurcated H-bond systems are common in alpha-helical transmembrane proteins between the backbone amide C=O of residue i as the H-bond acceptor and two H-bond donors from residue i + 4: the backbone amide N−H and a side-chain hydroxyl or thiol H+. The energy preference of the bifurcated H-bond hydroxyl or thiol system is -3.4 kcal/mol or -2.6 kcal/mol, respectively. This type of bifurcated H-bond provides an intrahelical H-bonding partner for polar side-chains, such as serine, threonine, and cysteine within the hydrophobic membrane environments.[27]

The role of hydrogen bonds in protein folding has also been linked to osmolyte-induced protein stabilization. Protective osmolytes, such as trehalose and sorbitol, shift the protein folding equilibrium toward the folded state, in a concentration dependent manner. While the prevalent explanation for osmolyte action relies on excluded volume effects that are entropic in nature, circular dichroism (CD) experiments have shown osmolyte to act through an enthalpic effect.[48] The molecular mechanism for their role in protein stabilization is still not well established, though several mechanisms have been proposed. Computer molecular dynamics simulations suggest that osmolytes stabilize proteins by modifying the hydrogen bonds in the protein hydration layer.[49]

Several studies have shown that hydrogen bonds play an important role for the stability between subunits in multimeric proteins. For example, a study of sorbitol dehydrogenase displayed an important hydrogen bonding network which stabilizes the tetrameric quaternary structure within the mammalian sorbitol dehydrogenase protein family.[50]

A protein backbone hydrogen bond incompletely shielded from water attack is a dehydron. Dehydrons promote the removal of water through proteins or ligand binding. The exogenous dehydration enhances the electrostatic interaction between the amide and carbonyl groups by de-shielding their partial charges. Furthermore, the dehydration stabilizes the hydrogen bond by destabilizing the nonbonded state consisting of dehydrated isolated charges.[51]

Wool, being a protein fibre, is held together by hydrogen bonds, causing wool to recoil when stretched. However, washing at high temperatures can permanently break the hydrogen bonds and a garment may permanently lose its shape.

Other polymers edit

 
Para-aramid structure
 
A strand of cellulose (conformation Iα), showing the hydrogen bonds (dashed) within and between cellulose molecules

The properties of many polymers are affected by hydrogen bonds within and/or between the chains. Prominent examples include cellulose and its derived fibers, such as cotton and flax. In nylon, hydrogen bonds between carbonyl and the amide NH effectively link adjacent chains, which gives the material mechanical strength. Hydrogen bonds also affect the aramid fibre, where hydrogen bonds stabilize the linear chains laterally. The chain axes are aligned along the fibre axis, making the fibres extremely stiff and strong. Hydrogen-bond networks make both polymers sensitive to humidity levels in the atmosphere because water molecules can diffuse into the surface and disrupt the network. Some polymers are more sensitive than others. Thus nylons are more sensitive than aramids, and nylon 6 more sensitive than nylon-11.[citation needed]

Symmetric hydrogen bond edit

A symmetric hydrogen bond is a special type of hydrogen bond in which the proton is spaced exactly halfway between two identical atoms. The strength of the bond to each of those atoms is equal. It is an example of a three-center four-electron bond. This type of bond is much stronger than a "normal" hydrogen bond. The effective bond order is 0.5, so its strength is comparable to a covalent bond. It is seen in ice at high pressure, and also in the solid phase of many anhydrous acids such as hydrofluoric acid and formic acid at high pressure. It is also seen in the bifluoride ion [F···H···F]. Due to severe steric constraint, the protonated form of Proton Sponge (1,8-bis(dimethylamino)naphthalene) and its derivatives also have symmetric hydrogen bonds ([N···H···N]+),[52] although in the case of protonated Proton Sponge, the assembly is bent.[53]

Dihydrogen bond edit

The hydrogen bond can be compared with the closely related dihydrogen bond, which is also an intermolecular bonding interaction involving hydrogen atoms. These structures have been known for some time, and well characterized by crystallography;[54] however, an understanding of their relationship to the conventional hydrogen bond, ionic bond, and covalent bond remains unclear. Generally, the hydrogen bond is characterized by a proton acceptor that is a lone pair of electrons in nonmetallic atoms (most notably in the nitrogen, and chalcogen groups). In some cases, these proton acceptors may be pi-bonds or metal complexes. In the dihydrogen bond, however, a metal hydride serves as a proton acceptor, thus forming a hydrogen-hydrogen interaction. Neutron diffraction has shown that the molecular geometry of these complexes is similar to hydrogen bonds, in that the bond length is very adaptable to the metal complex/hydrogen donor system.[54]

Application to drugs edit

The Hydrogen bond is relevant to drug design. According to Lipinski's rule of five the majority of orally active drugs have no more than five hydrogen bond donors and fewer than ten hydrogen bond acceptors. These interactions exist between nitrogenhydrogen and oxygen–hydrogen centers.[55] Many drugs do not, however, obey these "rules".[56]

References edit

  1. ^ Sweetman, A. M.; Jarvis, S. P.; Sang, Hongqian; Lekkas, I.; Rahe, P.; Wang, Yu; Wang, Jianbo; Champness, N.R.; Kantorovich, L.; Moriarty, P. (2014). "Mapping the force field of a hydrogen-bonded assembly". Nature Communications. 5: 3931. Bibcode:2014NatCo...5.3931S. doi:10.1038/ncomms4931. PMC 4050271. PMID 24875276.
  2. ^ Hapala, Prokop; Kichin, Georgy; Wagner, Christian; Tautz, F. Stefan; Temirov, Ruslan; Jelínek, Pavel (2014-08-19). "Mechanism of high-resolution STM/AFM imaging with functionalized tips". Physical Review B. 90 (8): 085421. arXiv:1406.3562. Bibcode:2014PhRvB..90h5421H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.90.085421. S2CID 53610973.
  3. ^ De Luca, S.; Chen, F.; Seal, P.; Stenzel, M. H.; Smith, S. C. (2017). "Binding and Release between Polymeric Carrier and Protein Drug: pH-Mediated Interplay of Coulomb Forces, Hydrogen Bonding, van der Waals Interactions, and Entropy". Biomacromolecules. 18 (11): 3665–3677. doi:10.1021/acs.biomac.7b00657. PMID 28880549.
  4. ^ Hämäläinen, Sampsa K.; van der Heijden, Nadine; van der Lit, Joost; den Hartog, Stephan; Liljeroth, Peter; Swart, Ingmar (2014-10-31). . Physical Review Letters. 113 (18): 186102. arXiv:1410.1933. Bibcode:2014PhRvL.113r6102H. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.113.186102. hdl:1874/307996. PMID 25396382. S2CID 8309018. Archived from the original on 2018-01-20. Retrieved 2017-08-30.
  5. ^ a b c Arunan, Elangannan; Desiraju, Gautam R.; Klein, Roger A.; Sadlej, Joanna; Scheiner, Steve; Alkorta, Ibon; Clary, David C.; Crabtree, Robert H.; Dannenberg, Joseph J. (2011-07-08). "Definition of the hydrogen bond (IUPAC Recommendations 2011)". Pure and Applied Chemistry. 83 (8): 1637–1641. doi:10.1351/PAC-REC-10-01-02. ISSN 1365-3075. S2CID 97688573.
  6. ^ Pimentel, G. The Hydrogen Bond Franklin Classics, 2018), ISBN 0343171600
  7. ^ Jeffrey, G. A.; An introduction to hydrogen bonding; Oxford university press New York, 1997. ISBN 0195095499
  8. ^ Jeffrey, G. A.; Saenger, W. Hydrogen bonding in biological structures; Springer: Berlin, 1994, 2012 Springer; ISBN 3540579036
  9. ^ IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "hydrogen bond". doi:10.1351/goldbook.H02899
  10. ^ Steiner, Thomas (2002). "The Hydrogen Bond in the Solid State". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 41 (1): 48–76. doi:10.1002/1521-3773(20020104)41:1<48::AID-ANIE48>3.0.CO;2-U. PMID 12491444.
  11. ^ Sabin, John R. (1971). "Hydrogen bonds involving sulfur. I. Hydrogen sulfide dimer". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 93 (15): 3613–3620. doi:10.1021/ja00744a012.
  12. ^ Beijer, Felix H.; Kooijman, Huub; Spek, Anthony L.; Sijbesma, Rint P.; Meijer, E. W. (1998). "Self-Complementarity Achieved through Quadruple Hydrogen Bonding". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 37 (1–2): 75–78. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1521-3773(19980202)37:1/2<75::AID-ANIE75>3.0.CO;2-R.
  13. ^ Desiraju, G. R. and Steiner, T. The Weak Hydrogen Bond: In Structural Chemistry and Biology, International Union of Crystallography;2001, ISBN 0198509707
  14. ^ Nishio, M.; Hirota, M.; Umezawa, Y. The CH–π Interactions; Wiley-VCH, New York, 1998. • Wiley-VCH; 1998) ISBN 0471252905
  15. ^ Nishio, M (2011). "The CH/[small pi] hydrogen bond in chemistry. "Title". Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 13 (31): 13873–13900. doi:10.1039/c1cp20404a. PMID 21611676.
  16. ^ Arunan, Elangannan; Desiraju, Gautam R.; Klein, Roger A.; Sadlej, Joanna; Scheiner, Steve; Alkorta, Ibon; Clary, David C.; Crabtree, Robert H.; Dannenberg, Joseph J.; Hobza, Pavel; Kjaergaard, Henrik G.; Legon, Anthony C.; Mennucci, Benedetta; Nesbitt, David J. (2011). "Definition of the hydrogen bond". Pure Appl. Chem. 83 (8): 1637–1641. doi:10.1351/PAC-REC-10-01-02. S2CID 97688573.
  17. ^ Larson, J. W.; McMahon, T. B. (1984). "Gas-phase bihalide and pseudobihalide ions. An ion cyclotron resonance determination of hydrogen bond energies in XHY- species (X, Y = F, Cl, Br, CN)". Inorganic Chemistry. 23 (14): 2029–2033. doi:10.1021/ic00182a010.
  18. ^ a b Emsley, J. (1980). "Very Strong Hydrogen Bonds". Chemical Society Reviews. 9 (1): 91–124. doi:10.1039/cs9800900091.
  19. ^ V. David, N. Grinberg, S. C. Moldoveanu in Advances in Chromatography Volume 54 (Eds.: E. Grushka, N. Grinberg), CRC Press, Boca Raton, 2018, chapter 3.
  20. ^ Data obtained using molecular dynamics as detailed in the reference and should be compared to 7.9 kJ/mol for bulk water, obtained using the same calculation.Markovitch, Omer; Agmon, Noam (2007). (PDF). J. Phys. Chem. A. 111 (12): 2253–2256. Bibcode:2007JPCA..111.2253M. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.76.9448. doi:10.1021/jp068960g. PMID 17388314. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-08-13. Retrieved 2017-10-25.
  21. ^ Biedermann F, Schneider HJ (May 2016). "Experimental Binding Energies in Supramolecular Complexes". Chemical Reviews. 116 (9): 5216–300. doi:10.1021/acs.chemrev.5b00583. PMID 27136957.
  22. ^ Gu, Yanliang; Kar, Tapas; Scheiner, Steve (1999). "Fundamental Properties of the CH···O Interaction: Is It a True Hydrogen Bond?". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 121 (40): 9411–9422. doi:10.1021/ja991795g.
  23. ^ Lin, Xuhui; Zhang, Huaiyu; Jiang, Xiaoyu; Wu, Wei; Mo, Yirong (2017). "The Origin of the Non-Additivity in Resonance-Assisted Hydrogen Bond Systems". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 121 (44): 8535–8541. Bibcode:2017JPCA..121.8535L. doi:10.1021/acs.jpca.7b09425. PMID 29048895.
  24. ^ Legon, A. C.; Millen, D. J. (1987). "Angular geometries and other properties of hydrogen-bonded dimers: a simple electrostatic interpretation of the success of the electron-pair model". Chemical Society Reviews. 16: 467. doi:10.1039/CS9871600467.
  25. ^ Friebolin, H., "Basic One- and Two- Dimensional NMR Spectroscopy, 4th ed.," VCH: Weinheim, 2008. ISBN 978-3-527-31233-7
  26. ^ Hobza P, Havlas Z (2000). "Blue-Shifting Hydrogen Bonds". Chem. Rev. 100 (11): 4253–4264. doi:10.1021/cr990050q. PMID 11749346.
  27. ^ a b Feldblum, Esther S.; Arkin, Isaiah T. (2014). "Strength of a bifurcated H bond". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 111 (11): 4085–4090. Bibcode:2014PNAS..111.4085F. doi:10.1073/pnas.1319827111. PMC 3964065. PMID 24591597.
  28. ^ Cowan ML; Bruner BD; Huse N; et al. (2005). "Ultrafast memory loss and energy redistribution in the hydrogen bond network of liquid H2O". Nature. 434 (7030): 199–202. Bibcode:2005Natur.434..199C. doi:10.1038/nature03383. PMID 15758995. S2CID 4396493.
  29. ^ a b Luo, Jiangshui; Jensen, Annemette H.; Brooks, Neil R.; Sniekers, Jeroen; Knipper, Martin; Aili, David; Li, Qingfeng; Vanroy, Bram; Wübbenhorst, Michael; Yan, Feng; Van Meervelt, Luc; Shao, Zhigang; Fang, Jianhua; Luo, Zheng-Hong; De Vos, Dirk E.; Binnemans, Koen; Fransaer, Jan (2015). "1,2,4-Triazolium perfluorobutanesulfonate as an archetypal pure protic organic ionic plastic crystal electrolyte for all-solid-state fuel cells". Energy & Environmental Science. 8 (4): 1276. doi:10.1039/C4EE02280G. S2CID 84176511.
  30. ^ Weinhold, Frank; Klein, Roger A. (2014). "What is a hydrogen bond? Resonance covalency in the supramolecular domain". Chemistry Education Research and Practice. 15 (3): 276–285. doi:10.1039/c4rp00030g.
  31. ^ Sun, C. Q.; Sun, Yi (2016). The Attribute of Water: Single Notion, Multiple Myths. Springer. ISBN 978-981-10-0178-9.
  32. ^ Grunenberg, Jörg (2004). "Direct Assessment of Interresidue Forces in Watson−Crick Base Pairs Using Theoretical Compliance Constants". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 126 (50): 16310–1. doi:10.1021/ja046282a. PMID 15600318.
  33. ^ Isaacs, E.D.; et al. (1999). "Covalency of the Hydrogen Bond in Ice: A Direct X-Ray Measurement". Physical Review Letters. 82 (3): 600–603. Bibcode:1999PhRvL..82..600I. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.82.600.
  34. ^ Ghanty, Tapan K.; Staroverov, Viktor N.; Koren, Patrick R.; Davidson, Ernest R. (2000-02-01). "Is the Hydrogen Bond in Water Dimer and Ice Covalent?". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 122 (6): 1210–1214. doi:10.1021/ja9937019. ISSN 0002-7863.
  35. ^ Cordier, F; Rogowski, M; Grzesiek, S; Bax, A (1999). "Observation of through-hydrogen-bond (2h)J(HC') in a perdeuterated protein". J Magn Reson. 140 (2): 510–2. Bibcode:1999JMagR.140..510C. doi:10.1006/jmre.1999.1899. PMID 10497060. S2CID 121429.
  36. ^ Needham, Paul (2013). "Hydrogen bonding: Homing in on a tricky chemical concept". Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A. 44 (1): 51–65. Bibcode:2013SHPSA..44...51N. doi:10.1016/j.shpsa.2012.04.001.
  37. ^ Pauling, L. (1960). The nature of the chemical bond and the structure of molecules and crystals; an introduction to modern structural chemistry (3rd ed.). Ithaca (NY): Cornell University Press. p. 450. ISBN 978-0-8014-0333-0.
  38. ^ Moore, T. S.; Winmill, T. F. (1912). "The state of amines in aqueous solution". J. Chem. Soc. 101: 1635. doi:10.1039/CT9120101635.
  39. ^ Latimer, Wendell M.; Rodebush, Worth H. (1920). "Polarity and ionization from the standpoint of the Lewis theory of valence". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 42 (7): 1419–1433. doi:10.1021/ja01452a015.
  40. ^ a b Jorgensen, W. L.; Madura, J. D. (1985). "Temperature and size dependence for Monte Carlo simulations of TIP4P water". Mol. Phys. 56 (6): 1381. Bibcode:1985MolPh..56.1381J. doi:10.1080/00268978500103111.
  41. ^ Zielkiewicz, Jan (2005). "Structural properties of water: Comparison of the SPC, SPCE, TIP4P, and TIP5P models of water". J. Chem. Phys. 123 (10): 104501. Bibcode:2005JChPh.123j4501Z. doi:10.1063/1.2018637. PMID 16178604.
  42. ^ Jencks, William; Jencks, William P. (1986). "Hydrogen Bonding between Solutes in Aqueous Solution". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 108 (14): 4196. doi:10.1021/ja00274a058.
  43. ^ Dillon, P. F. (2012). Biophysics: A Physiological Approach. Cambridge University Press. p. 37. ISBN 978-1-139-50462-1.
  44. ^ Baron, Michel; Giorgi-Renault, Sylviane; Renault, Jean; Mailliet, Patrick; Carré, Daniel; Etienne, Jean (1984). "Hétérocycles à fonction quinone. V. Réaction anormale de la butanedione avec la diamino-1,2 anthraquinone; structure cristalline de la naphto \2,3-f] quinoxalinedione-7,12 obtenue". Can. J. Chem. 62 (3): 526–530. doi:10.1139/v84-087.
  45. ^ Laage, Damien; Hynes, James T. (2006). "A Molecular Jump Mechanism for Water Reorientation". Science. 311 (5762): 832–5. Bibcode:2006Sci...311..832L. doi:10.1126/science.1122154. PMID 16439623. S2CID 6707413.
  46. ^ Markovitch, Omer; Agmon, Noam (2008). "The Distribution of Acceptor and Donor Hydrogen-Bonds in Bulk Liquid Water". Molecular Physics. 106 (2): 485. Bibcode:2008MolPh.106..485M. doi:10.1080/00268970701877921. S2CID 17648714.
  47. ^ Shiao-Wei Kuo (2018). Hydrogen Bonding in Polymer Materials. Wiley-VCH.
  48. ^ Politi, Regina; Harries, Daniel (2010). "Enthalpically driven peptide stabilization by protective osmolytes". ChemComm. 46 (35): 6449–6451. doi:10.1039/C0CC01763A. PMID 20657920.
  49. ^ Gilman-Politi, Regina; Harries, Daniel (2011). "Unraveling the Molecular Mechanism of Enthalpy Driven Peptide Folding by Polyol Osmolytes". Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation. 7 (11): 3816–3828. doi:10.1021/ct200455n. PMID 26598272.
  50. ^ Hellgren, M.; Kaiser, C.; de Haij, S.; Norberg, A.; Höög, J. O. (December 2007). "A hydrogen-bonding network in mammalian sorbitol dehydrogenase stabilizes the tetrameric state and is essential for the catalytic power". Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences. 64 (23): 3129–38. doi:10.1007/s00018-007-7318-1. PMID 17952367. S2CID 22090973.
  51. ^ Fernández, A.; Rogale K.; Scott Ridgway; Scheraga H. A. (June 2004). "Inhibitor design by wrapping packing defects in HIV-1 proteins". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 101 (32): 11640–5. Bibcode:2004PNAS..10111640F. doi:10.1073/pnas.0404641101. PMC 511032. PMID 15289598.
  52. ^ Khashayar Rajabimoghadam Yousef Darwish Umyeena Bashir Dylan Pitman Sidney Eichelberger Maxime A. Siegler Marcel Swart Isaac Garcia-Bosch Aerobic Oxidation of Alcohols by Copper Complexes Bearing Redox-Active Ligands with Tunable H-Bonding https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.8b08748
  53. ^ Ozeryanskii, Valery A.; Pozharskii, Alexander F.; Bieńko, Agnieszka J.; Sawka-Dobrowolska, Wanda; Sobczyk, Lucjan (2005-03-01). "[NHN]+ Hydrogen Bonding in Protonated 1,8-Bis(dimethylamino)-2,7-dimethoxynaphthalene. X-ray Diffraction, Infrared, and Theoretical ab Initio and DFT Studies". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 109 (8): 1637–1642. Bibcode:2005JPCA..109.1637O. doi:10.1021/jp040618l. ISSN 1089-5639. PMID 16833488.
  54. ^ a b Crabtree, Robert H.; Siegbahn, Per E. M.; Eisenstein, Odile; Rheingold, Arnold L.; Koetzle, Thomas F. (1996). "A New Intermolecular Interaction: Unconventional Hydrogen Bonds with Element-Hydride Bonds as Proton Acceptor". Acc. Chem. Res. 29 (7): 348–354. doi:10.1021/ar950150s. PMID 19904922.
  55. ^ Lipinski CA (December 2004). "Lead- and drug-like compounds: the rule-of-five revolution". Drug Discovery Today: Technologies. 1 (4): 337–341. doi:10.1016/j.ddtec.2004.11.007. PMID 24981612.
  56. ^ o′Hagan, Steve; Swainston, Neil; Handl, Julia; Kell, Douglas B. (2015). "A 'rule of 0.5' for the metabolite-likeness of approved pharmaceutical drugs". Metabolomics. 11 (2): 323–339. doi:10.1007/s11306-014-0733-z. PMC 4342520. PMID 25750602.

Further reading edit

  • George A. Jeffrey. An Introduction to Hydrogen Bonding (Topics in Physical Chemistry). Oxford University Press, US (March 13, 1997). ISBN 0-19-509549-9

External links edit

  • (Audio slideshow from the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory explaining cohesion, surface tension and hydrogen bonds)
  • isotopic effect on bond dynamics

hydrogen, bond, chemistry, hydrogen, bond, bond, primarily, electrostatic, force, attraction, between, hydrogen, atom, which, covalently, bonded, more, electronegative, donor, atom, group, another, electronegative, atom, bearing, lone, pair, electrons, hydroge. In chemistry a hydrogen bond or H bond is primarily an electrostatic force of attraction between a hydrogen H atom which is covalently bonded to a more electronegative donor atom or group Dn and another electronegative atom bearing a lone pair of electrons the hydrogen bond acceptor Ac Such an interacting system is generally denoted Dn H Ac where the solid line denotes a polar covalent bond and the dotted or dashed line indicates the hydrogen bond 5 The most frequent donor and acceptor atoms are the period 2 elements nitrogen N oxygen O and fluorine F Model of hydrogen bonds 1 between molecules of waterAFM image of naphthalenetetracarboxylic diimide molecules on silver terminated silicon interacting via hydrogen bonding taken at 77 K 1 Hydrogen bonds in the top image are exaggerated by artifacts of the imaging technique 2 3 4 Hydrogen bonds can be intermolecular occurring between separate molecules or intramolecular occurring among parts of the same molecule 6 7 8 9 The energy of a hydrogen bond depends on the geometry the environment and the nature of the specific donor and acceptor atoms and can vary between 1 and 40 kcal mol 10 This makes them somewhat stronger than a van der Waals interaction and weaker than fully covalent or ionic bonds This type of bond can occur in inorganic molecules such as water and in organic molecules like DNA and proteins Hydrogen bonds are responsible for holding materials such as paper and felted wool together and for causing separate sheets of paper to stick together after becoming wet and subsequently drying The hydrogen bond is also responsible for many of the physical and chemical properties of compounds of N O and F that seem unusual compared with other similar structures In particular intermolecular hydrogen bonding is responsible for the high boiling point of water 100 C compared to the other group 16 hydrides that have much weaker hydrogen bonds 11 Intramolecular hydrogen bonding is partly responsible for the secondary and tertiary structures of proteins and nucleic acids Contents 1 Bonding 1 1 Definitions and general characteristics 1 2 Bond strength 1 3 Resonance assisted hydrogen bond 1 4 Structural details 1 5 Spectroscopy 1 6 Theoretical considerations 2 History 3 Hydrogen bonds in small molecules 3 1 Water 3 2 Bifurcated and over coordinated hydrogen bonds in water 3 3 Other liquids 3 4 Further manifestations of solvent hydrogen bonding 4 Hydrogen bonds in polymers 4 1 DNA 4 2 Proteins 4 3 Other polymers 5 Symmetric hydrogen bond 6 Dihydrogen bond 7 Application to drugs 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBonding edit nbsp An example of intermolecular hydrogen bonding in a self assembled dimer complex 12 The hydrogen bonds are represented by dotted lines nbsp Intramolecular hydrogen bonding in acetylacetone helps stabilize the enol tautomer Definitions and general characteristics edit In a hydrogen bond the electronegative atom not covalently attached to the hydrogen is named the proton acceptor whereas the one covalently bound to the hydrogen is named the proton donor This nomenclature is recommended by the IUPAC 5 The hydrogen of the donor is protic and therefore can act as a Lewis acid and the acceptor is the Lewis base Hydrogen bonds are represented as H Y system where the dots represent the hydrogen bond Liquids that display hydrogen bonding such as water are called associated liquids citation needed nbsp Examples of hydrogen bond donating donors and hydrogen bond accepting groups acceptors nbsp Cyclic dimer of acetic acid dashed green lines represent hydrogen bondsHydrogen bonds arise from a combination of electrostatics multipole multipole and multipole induced multipole interactions covalency charge transfer by orbital overlap and dispersion London forces 5 In weaker hydrogen bonds 13 hydrogen atoms tend to bond to elements such as sulfur S or chlorine Cl even carbon C can serve as a donor particularly when the carbon or one of its neighbors is electronegative e g in chloroform aldehydes and terminal acetylenes 14 15 Gradually it was recognized that there are many examples of weaker hydrogen bonding involving donor other than N O or F and or acceptor Ac with electronegativity approaching that of hydrogen rather than being much more electronegative Although weak 1 kcal mol non traditional hydrogen bonding interactions are ubiquitous and influence structures of many kinds of materials citation needed The definition of hydrogen bonding has gradually broadened over time to include these weaker attractive interactions In 2011 an IUPAC Task Group recommended a modern evidence based definition of hydrogen bonding which was published in the IUPAC journal Pure and Applied Chemistry This definition specifies The hydrogen bond is an attractive interaction between a hydrogen atom from a molecule or a molecular fragment X H in which X is more electronegative than H and an atom or a group of atoms in the same or another molecule in which there is evidence of bond formation 16 Bond strength edit Hydrogen bonds can vary in strength from weak 1 2 kJ mol to strong 161 5 kJ mol in the bifluoride ion HF 2 17 18 Typical enthalpies in vapor include 19 F H F 161 5 kJ mol or 38 6 kcal mol illustrated uniquely by HF 2 O H N 29 kJ mol or 6 9 kcal mol illustrated water ammonia O H O 21 kJ mol or 5 0 kcal mol illustrated water water alcohol alcohol N H N 13 kJ mol or 3 1 kcal mol illustrated by ammonia ammonia N H O 8 kJ mol or 1 9 kcal mol illustrated water amide OH 3 OH2 18 kJ mol 20 or 4 3 kcal mol The strength of intermolecular hydrogen bonds is most often evaluated by measurements of equilibria between molecules containing donor and or acceptor units most often in solution 21 The strength of intramolecular hydrogen bonds can be studied with equilibria between conformers with and without hydrogen bonds The most important method for the identification of hydrogen bonds also in complicated molecules is crystallography sometimes also NMR spectroscopy Structural details in particular distances between donor and acceptor which are smaller than the sum of the van der Waals radii can be taken as indication of the hydrogen bond strength One scheme gives the following somewhat arbitrary classification those that are 15 to 40 kcal mol 5 to 15 kcal mol and gt 0 to 5 kcal mol are considered strong moderate and weak respectively 18 Hydrogen bonds involving C H bonds are both very rare and weak 22 Resonance assisted hydrogen bond edit The resonance assisted hydrogen bond commonly abbreviated as RAHB is a strong type of hydrogen bond It is characterized by the p delocalization that involves the hydrogen and cannot be properly described by the electrostatic model alone This description of the hydrogen bond has been proposed to describe unusually short distances generally observed between O C OH or O C C C OH 23 Structural details edit The X H distance is typically 110 pm whereas the H Y distance is 160 to 200 pm The typical length of a hydrogen bond in water is 197 pm The ideal bond angle depends on the nature of the hydrogen bond donor The following hydrogen bond angles between a hydrofluoric acid donor and various acceptors have been determined experimentally 24 Acceptor donor VSEPR geometry Angle HCN HF linear 180H2CO HF trigonal planar 120H2O HF pyramidal 46H2S HF pyramidal 89SO2 HF verification needed trigonal 142Spectroscopy edit Strong hydrogen bonds are revealed by downfield shifts in the 1H NMR spectrum For example the acidic proton in the enol tautomer of acetylacetone appears at d H displaystyle delta text H nbsp 15 5 which is about 10 ppm downfield of a conventional alcohol 25 In the IR spectrum hydrogen bonding shifts the X H stretching frequency to lower energy i e the vibration frequency decreases This shift reflects a weakening of the X H bond Certain hydrogen bonds improper hydrogen bonds show a blue shift of the X H stretching frequency and a decrease in the bond length 26 H bonds can also be measured by IR vibrational mode shifts of the acceptor The amide I mode of backbone carbonyls in a helices shifts to lower frequencies when they form H bonds with side chain hydroxyl groups 27 The dynamics of hydrogen bond structures in water can be probed by this OH stretching vibration 28 In the hydrogen bonding network in protic organic ionic plastic crystals POIPCs which are a type of phase change material exhibiting solid solid phase transitions prior to melting variable temperature infrared spectroscopy can reveal the temperature dependence of hydrogen bonds and the dynamics of both the anions and the cations 29 The sudden weakening of hydrogen bonds during the solid solid phase transition seems to be coupled with the onset of orientational or rotational disorder of the ions 29 Theoretical considerations edit Hydrogen bonding is of persistent theoretical interest 30 According to a modern description O H O integrates both the intermolecular O H lone pair nonbond and the intramolecular H O polar covalent bond associated with O O repulsive coupling 31 Quantum chemical calculations of the relevant interresidue potential constants compliance constants revealed how large differences between individual H bonds of the same type For example the central interresidue N H N hydrogen bond between guanine and cytosine is much stronger in comparison to the N H N bond between the adenine thymine pair 32 Theoretically the bond strength of the hydrogen bonds can be assessed using NCI index non covalent interactions index which allows a visualization of these non covalent interactions as its name indicates using the electron density of the system citation needed Interpretations of the anisotropies in the Compton profile of ordinary ice claim that the hydrogen bond is partly covalent 33 However this interpretation was challenged 34 Most generally the hydrogen bond can be viewed as a metric dependent electrostatic scalar field between two or more intermolecular bonds This is slightly different from the intramolecular bound states of for example covalent or ionic bonds However hydrogen bonding is generally still a bound state phenomenon since the interaction energy has a net negative sum The initial theory of hydrogen bonding proposed by Linus Pauling suggested that the hydrogen bonds had a partial covalent nature This interpretation remained controversial until NMR techniques demonstrated information transfer between hydrogen bonded nuclei a feat that would only be possible if the hydrogen bond contained some covalent character 35 History editThe concept of hydrogen bonding once was challenging 36 Linus Pauling credits T S Moore and T F Winmill with the first mention of the hydrogen bond in 1912 37 38 Moore and Winmill used the hydrogen bond to account for the fact that trimethylammonium hydroxide is a weaker base than tetramethylammonium hydroxide The description of hydrogen bonding in its better known setting water came some years later in 1920 from Latimer and Rodebush 39 In that paper Latimer and Rodebush cited the work of a fellow scientist at their laboratory Maurice Loyal Huggins saying Mr Huggins of this laboratory in some work as yet unpublished has used the idea of a hydrogen kernel held between two atoms as a theory in regard to certain organic compounds Hydrogen bonds in small molecules edit nbsp Crystal structure of hexagonal ice Gray dashed lines indicate hydrogen bonds nbsp Structure of nickel bis dimethylglyoximate which features two linear hydrogen bonds Water edit An ubiquitous example of a hydrogen bond is found between water molecules In a discrete water molecule there are two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom The simplest case is a pair of water molecules with one hydrogen bond between them which is called the water dimer and is often used as a model system When more molecules are present as is the case with liquid water more bonds are possible because the oxygen of one water molecule has two lone pairs of electrons each of which can form a hydrogen bond with a hydrogen on another water molecule This can repeat such that every water molecule is H bonded with up to four other molecules as shown in the figure two through its two lone pairs and two through its two hydrogen atoms Hydrogen bonding strongly affects the crystal structure of ice helping to create an open hexagonal lattice The density of ice is less than the density of water at the same temperature thus the solid phase of water floats on the liquid unlike most other substances citation needed Liquid water s high boiling point is due to the high number of hydrogen bonds each molecule can form relative to its low molecular mass Owing to the difficulty of breaking these bonds water has a very high boiling point melting point and viscosity compared to otherwise similar liquids not conjoined by hydrogen bonds Water is unique because its oxygen atom has two lone pairs and two hydrogen atoms meaning that the total number of bonds of a water molecule is up to four citation needed The number of hydrogen bonds formed by a molecule of liquid water fluctuates with time and temperature 40 From TIP4P liquid water simulations at 25 C it was estimated that each water molecule participates in an average of 3 59 hydrogen bonds At 100 C this number decreases to 3 24 due to the increased molecular motion and decreased density while at 0 C the average number of hydrogen bonds increases to 3 69 40 Another study found a much smaller number of hydrogen bonds 2 357 at 25 C 41 Defining and counting the hydrogen bonds is not straightforward however Because water may form hydrogen bonds with solute proton donors and acceptors it may competitively inhibit the formation of solute intermolecular or intramolecular hydrogen bonds Consequently hydrogen bonds between or within solute molecules dissolved in water are almost always unfavorable relative to hydrogen bonds between water and the donors and acceptors for hydrogen bonds on those solutes 42 Hydrogen bonds between water molecules have an average lifetime of 10 11 seconds or 10 picoseconds 43 Bifurcated and over coordinated hydrogen bonds in water edit A single hydrogen atom can participate in two hydrogen bonds This type of bonding is called bifurcated split in two or two forked It can exist for instance in complex organic molecules 44 It has been suggested that a bifurcated hydrogen atom is an essential step in water reorientation 45 Acceptor type hydrogen bonds terminating on an oxygen s lone pairs are more likely to form bifurcation it is called overcoordinated oxygen OCO than are donor type hydrogen bonds beginning on the same oxygen s hydrogens 46 Other liquids edit For example hydrogen fluoride which has three lone pairs on the F atom but only one H atom can form only two bonds ammonia has the opposite problem three hydrogen atoms but only one lone pair H F H F H F displaystyle ce H F H F H F nbsp Further manifestations of solvent hydrogen bonding edit Increase in the melting point boiling point solubility and viscosity of many compounds can be explained by the concept of hydrogen bonding Negative azeotropy of mixtures of HF and water The fact that ice is less dense than liquid water is due to a crystal structure stabilized by hydrogen bonds Dramatically higher boiling points of NH3 H2O and HF compared to the heavier analogues PH3 H2S and HCl where hydrogen bonding is absent Viscosity of anhydrous phosphoric acid and of glycerol Dimer formation in carboxylic acids and hexamer formation in hydrogen fluoride which occur even in the gas phase resulting in gross deviations from the ideal gas law Pentamer formation of water and alcohols in apolar solvents Hydrogen bonds in polymers editHydrogen bonding plays an important role in determining the three dimensional structures and the properties adopted by many proteins Compared to the C C C O and C N bonds that comprise most polymers hydrogen bonds are far weaker perhaps 5 Thus hydrogen bonds can be broken by chemical or mechanical means while retaining the basic structure of the polymer backbone This hierarchy of bond strengths covalent bonds being stronger than hydrogen bonds being stronger than van der Waals forces is relevant in the properties of many materials 47 DNA edit nbsp The structure of part of a DNA double helix nbsp Hydrogen bonding between guanine and cytosine one of two types of base pairs in DNAIn these macromolecules bonding between parts of the same macromolecule cause it to fold into a specific shape which helps determine the molecule s physiological or biochemical role For example the double helical structure of DNA is due largely to hydrogen bonding between its base pairs as well as pi stacking interactions which link one complementary strand to the other and enable replication citation needed Proteins edit In the secondary structure of proteins hydrogen bonds form between the backbone oxygens and amide hydrogens When the spacing of the amino acid residues participating in a hydrogen bond occurs regularly between positions i and i 4 an alpha helix is formed When the spacing is less between positions i and i 3 then a 310 helix is formed When two strands are joined by hydrogen bonds involving alternating residues on each participating strand a beta sheet is formed Hydrogen bonds also play a part in forming the tertiary structure of protein through interaction of R groups See also protein folding Bifurcated H bond systems are common in alpha helical transmembrane proteins between the backbone amide C O of residue i as the H bond acceptor and two H bond donors from residue i 4 the backbone amide N H and a side chain hydroxyl or thiol H The energy preference of the bifurcated H bond hydroxyl or thiol system is 3 4 kcal mol or 2 6 kcal mol respectively This type of bifurcated H bond provides an intrahelical H bonding partner for polar side chains such as serine threonine and cysteine within the hydrophobic membrane environments 27 The role of hydrogen bonds in protein folding has also been linked to osmolyte induced protein stabilization Protective osmolytes such as trehalose and sorbitol shift the protein folding equilibrium toward the folded state in a concentration dependent manner While the prevalent explanation for osmolyte action relies on excluded volume effects that are entropic in nature circular dichroism CD experiments have shown osmolyte to act through an enthalpic effect 48 The molecular mechanism for their role in protein stabilization is still not well established though several mechanisms have been proposed Computer molecular dynamics simulations suggest that osmolytes stabilize proteins by modifying the hydrogen bonds in the protein hydration layer 49 Several studies have shown that hydrogen bonds play an important role for the stability between subunits in multimeric proteins For example a study of sorbitol dehydrogenase displayed an important hydrogen bonding network which stabilizes the tetrameric quaternary structure within the mammalian sorbitol dehydrogenase protein family 50 A protein backbone hydrogen bond incompletely shielded from water attack is a dehydron Dehydrons promote the removal of water through proteins or ligand binding The exogenous dehydration enhances the electrostatic interaction between the amide and carbonyl groups by de shielding their partial charges Furthermore the dehydration stabilizes the hydrogen bond by destabilizing the nonbonded state consisting of dehydrated isolated charges 51 Wool being a protein fibre is held together by hydrogen bonds causing wool to recoil when stretched However washing at high temperatures can permanently break the hydrogen bonds and a garment may permanently lose its shape Other polymers edit nbsp Para aramid structure nbsp A strand of cellulose conformation Ia showing the hydrogen bonds dashed within and between cellulose moleculesThe properties of many polymers are affected by hydrogen bonds within and or between the chains Prominent examples include cellulose and its derived fibers such as cotton and flax In nylon hydrogen bonds between carbonyl and the amide NH effectively link adjacent chains which gives the material mechanical strength Hydrogen bonds also affect the aramid fibre where hydrogen bonds stabilize the linear chains laterally The chain axes are aligned along the fibre axis making the fibres extremely stiff and strong Hydrogen bond networks make both polymers sensitive to humidity levels in the atmosphere because water molecules can diffuse into the surface and disrupt the network Some polymers are more sensitive than others Thus nylons are more sensitive than aramids and nylon 6 more sensitive than nylon 11 citation needed Symmetric hydrogen bond editA symmetric hydrogen bond is a special type of hydrogen bond in which the proton is spaced exactly halfway between two identical atoms The strength of the bond to each of those atoms is equal It is an example of a three center four electron bond This type of bond is much stronger than a normal hydrogen bond The effective bond order is 0 5 so its strength is comparable to a covalent bond It is seen in ice at high pressure and also in the solid phase of many anhydrous acids such as hydrofluoric acid and formic acid at high pressure It is also seen in the bifluoride ion F H F Due to severe steric constraint the protonated form of Proton Sponge 1 8 bis dimethylamino naphthalene and its derivatives also have symmetric hydrogen bonds N H N 52 although in the case of protonated Proton Sponge the assembly is bent 53 Dihydrogen bond editThe hydrogen bond can be compared with the closely related dihydrogen bond which is also an intermolecular bonding interaction involving hydrogen atoms These structures have been known for some time and well characterized by crystallography 54 however an understanding of their relationship to the conventional hydrogen bond ionic bond and covalent bond remains unclear Generally the hydrogen bond is characterized by a proton acceptor that is a lone pair of electrons in nonmetallic atoms most notably in the nitrogen and chalcogen groups In some cases these proton acceptors may be pi bonds or metal complexes In the dihydrogen bond however a metal hydride serves as a proton acceptor thus forming a hydrogen hydrogen interaction Neutron diffraction has shown that the molecular geometry of these complexes is similar to hydrogen bonds in that the bond length is very adaptable to the metal complex hydrogen donor system 54 Application to drugs editThe Hydrogen bond is relevant to drug design According to Lipinski s rule of five the majority of orally active drugs have no more than five hydrogen bond donors and fewer than ten hydrogen bond acceptors These interactions exist between nitrogen hydrogen and oxygen hydrogen centers 55 Many drugs do not however obey these rules 56 References edit Sweetman A M Jarvis S P Sang Hongqian Lekkas I Rahe P Wang Yu Wang Jianbo Champness N R Kantorovich L Moriarty P 2014 Mapping the force field of a hydrogen bonded assembly Nature Communications 5 3931 Bibcode 2014NatCo 5 3931S doi 10 1038 ncomms4931 PMC 4050271 PMID 24875276 Hapala Prokop Kichin Georgy Wagner Christian Tautz F Stefan Temirov Ruslan Jelinek Pavel 2014 08 19 Mechanism of high resolution STM AFM imaging with functionalized tips Physical Review B 90 8 085421 arXiv 1406 3562 Bibcode 2014PhRvB 90h5421H doi 10 1103 PhysRevB 90 085421 S2CID 53610973 De Luca S Chen F Seal P Stenzel M H Smith S C 2017 Binding and Release between Polymeric Carrier and Protein Drug pH Mediated Interplay of Coulomb Forces Hydrogen Bonding van der Waals Interactions and Entropy Biomacromolecules 18 11 3665 3677 doi 10 1021 acs biomac 7b00657 PMID 28880549 Hamalainen Sampsa K van der Heijden Nadine van der Lit Joost den Hartog Stephan Liljeroth Peter Swart Ingmar 2014 10 31 Intermolecular Contrast in Atomic Force Microscopy Images without Intermolecular Bonds Physical Review Letters 113 18 186102 arXiv 1410 1933 Bibcode 2014PhRvL 113r6102H doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 113 186102 hdl 1874 307996 PMID 25396382 S2CID 8309018 Archived from the original on 2018 01 20 Retrieved 2017 08 30 a b c Arunan Elangannan Desiraju Gautam R Klein Roger A Sadlej Joanna Scheiner Steve Alkorta Ibon Clary David C Crabtree Robert H Dannenberg Joseph J 2011 07 08 Definition of the hydrogen bond IUPAC Recommendations 2011 Pure and Applied Chemistry 83 8 1637 1641 doi 10 1351 PAC REC 10 01 02 ISSN 1365 3075 S2CID 97688573 Pimentel G The Hydrogen Bond Franklin Classics 2018 ISBN 0343171600 Jeffrey G A An introduction to hydrogen bonding Oxford university press New York 1997 ISBN 0195095499 Jeffrey G A Saenger W Hydrogen bonding in biological structures Springer Berlin 1994 2012 Springer ISBN 3540579036 IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 hydrogen bond doi 10 1351 goldbook H02899 Steiner Thomas 2002 The Hydrogen Bond in the Solid State Angew Chem Int Ed 41 1 48 76 doi 10 1002 1521 3773 20020104 41 1 lt 48 AID ANIE48 gt 3 0 CO 2 U PMID 12491444 Sabin John R 1971 Hydrogen bonds involving sulfur I Hydrogen sulfide dimer J Am Chem Soc 93 15 3613 3620 doi 10 1021 ja00744a012 Beijer Felix H Kooijman Huub Spek Anthony L Sijbesma Rint P Meijer E W 1998 Self Complementarity Achieved through Quadruple Hydrogen Bonding Angew Chem Int Ed 37 1 2 75 78 doi 10 1002 SICI 1521 3773 19980202 37 1 2 lt 75 AID ANIE75 gt 3 0 CO 2 R Desiraju G R and Steiner T The Weak Hydrogen Bond In Structural Chemistry and Biology International Union of Crystallography 2001 ISBN 0198509707 Nishio M Hirota M Umezawa Y The CH p Interactions Wiley VCH New York 1998 Wiley VCH 1998 ISBN 0471252905 Nishio M 2011 The CH small pi hydrogen bond in chemistry Title Phys Chem Chem Phys 13 31 13873 13900 doi 10 1039 c1cp20404a PMID 21611676 Arunan Elangannan Desiraju Gautam R Klein Roger A Sadlej Joanna Scheiner Steve Alkorta Ibon Clary David C Crabtree Robert H Dannenberg Joseph J Hobza Pavel Kjaergaard Henrik G Legon Anthony C Mennucci Benedetta Nesbitt David J 2011 Definition of the hydrogen bond Pure Appl Chem 83 8 1637 1641 doi 10 1351 PAC REC 10 01 02 S2CID 97688573 Larson J W McMahon T B 1984 Gas phase bihalide and pseudobihalide ions An ion cyclotron resonance determination of hydrogen bond energies in XHY species X Y F Cl Br CN Inorganic Chemistry 23 14 2029 2033 doi 10 1021 ic00182a010 a b Emsley J 1980 Very Strong Hydrogen Bonds Chemical Society Reviews 9 1 91 124 doi 10 1039 cs9800900091 V David N Grinberg S C Moldoveanu in Advances in Chromatography Volume 54 Eds E Grushka N Grinberg CRC Press Boca Raton 2018 chapter 3 Data obtained using molecular dynamics as detailed in the reference and should be compared to 7 9 kJ mol for bulk water obtained using the same calculation Markovitch Omer Agmon Noam 2007 Structure and energetics of the hydronium hydration shells PDF J Phys Chem A 111 12 2253 2256 Bibcode 2007JPCA 111 2253M CiteSeerX 10 1 1 76 9448 doi 10 1021 jp068960g PMID 17388314 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 08 13 Retrieved 2017 10 25 Biedermann F Schneider HJ May 2016 Experimental Binding Energies in Supramolecular Complexes Chemical Reviews 116 9 5216 300 doi 10 1021 acs chemrev 5b00583 PMID 27136957 Gu Yanliang Kar Tapas Scheiner Steve 1999 Fundamental Properties of the CH O Interaction Is It a True Hydrogen Bond Journal of the American Chemical Society 121 40 9411 9422 doi 10 1021 ja991795g Lin Xuhui Zhang Huaiyu Jiang Xiaoyu Wu Wei Mo Yirong 2017 The Origin of the Non Additivity in Resonance Assisted Hydrogen Bond Systems The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 121 44 8535 8541 Bibcode 2017JPCA 121 8535L doi 10 1021 acs jpca 7b09425 PMID 29048895 Legon A C Millen D J 1987 Angular geometries and other properties of hydrogen bonded dimers a simple electrostatic interpretation of the success of the electron pair model Chemical Society Reviews 16 467 doi 10 1039 CS9871600467 Friebolin H Basic One and Two Dimensional NMR Spectroscopy 4th ed VCH Weinheim 2008 ISBN 978 3 527 31233 7 Hobza P Havlas Z 2000 Blue Shifting Hydrogen Bonds Chem Rev 100 11 4253 4264 doi 10 1021 cr990050q PMID 11749346 a b Feldblum Esther S Arkin Isaiah T 2014 Strength of a bifurcated H bond Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111 11 4085 4090 Bibcode 2014PNAS 111 4085F doi 10 1073 pnas 1319827111 PMC 3964065 PMID 24591597 Cowan ML Bruner BD Huse N et al 2005 Ultrafast memory loss and energy redistribution in the hydrogen bond network of liquid H2O Nature 434 7030 199 202 Bibcode 2005Natur 434 199C doi 10 1038 nature03383 PMID 15758995 S2CID 4396493 a b Luo Jiangshui Jensen Annemette H Brooks Neil R Sniekers Jeroen Knipper Martin Aili David Li Qingfeng Vanroy Bram Wubbenhorst Michael Yan Feng Van Meervelt Luc Shao Zhigang Fang Jianhua Luo Zheng Hong De Vos Dirk E Binnemans Koen Fransaer Jan 2015 1 2 4 Triazolium perfluorobutanesulfonate as an archetypal pure protic organic ionic plastic crystal electrolyte for all solid state fuel cells Energy amp Environmental Science 8 4 1276 doi 10 1039 C4EE02280G S2CID 84176511 Weinhold Frank Klein Roger A 2014 What is a hydrogen bond Resonance covalency in the supramolecular domain Chemistry Education Research and Practice 15 3 276 285 doi 10 1039 c4rp00030g Sun C Q Sun Yi 2016 The Attribute of Water Single Notion Multiple Myths Springer ISBN 978 981 10 0178 9 Grunenberg Jorg 2004 Direct Assessment of Interresidue Forces in Watson Crick Base Pairs Using Theoretical Compliance Constants Journal of the American Chemical Society 126 50 16310 1 doi 10 1021 ja046282a PMID 15600318 Isaacs E D et al 1999 Covalency of the Hydrogen Bond in Ice A Direct X Ray Measurement Physical Review Letters 82 3 600 603 Bibcode 1999PhRvL 82 600I doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 82 600 Ghanty Tapan K Staroverov Viktor N Koren Patrick R Davidson Ernest R 2000 02 01 Is the Hydrogen Bond in Water Dimer and Ice Covalent Journal of the American Chemical Society 122 6 1210 1214 doi 10 1021 ja9937019 ISSN 0002 7863 Cordier F Rogowski M Grzesiek S Bax A 1999 Observation of through hydrogen bond 2h J HC in a perdeuterated protein J Magn Reson 140 2 510 2 Bibcode 1999JMagR 140 510C doi 10 1006 jmre 1999 1899 PMID 10497060 S2CID 121429 Needham Paul 2013 Hydrogen bonding Homing in on a tricky chemical concept Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 44 1 51 65 Bibcode 2013SHPSA 44 51N doi 10 1016 j shpsa 2012 04 001 Pauling L 1960 The nature of the chemical bond and the structure of molecules and crystals an introduction to modern structural chemistry 3rd ed Ithaca NY Cornell University Press p 450 ISBN 978 0 8014 0333 0 Moore T S Winmill T F 1912 The state of amines in aqueous solution J Chem Soc 101 1635 doi 10 1039 CT9120101635 Latimer Wendell M Rodebush Worth H 1920 Polarity and ionization from the standpoint of the Lewis theory of valence Journal of the American Chemical Society 42 7 1419 1433 doi 10 1021 ja01452a015 a b Jorgensen W L Madura J D 1985 Temperature and size dependence for Monte Carlo simulations of TIP4P water Mol Phys 56 6 1381 Bibcode 1985MolPh 56 1381J doi 10 1080 00268978500103111 Zielkiewicz Jan 2005 Structural properties of water Comparison of the SPC SPCE TIP4P and TIP5P models of water J Chem Phys 123 10 104501 Bibcode 2005JChPh 123j4501Z doi 10 1063 1 2018637 PMID 16178604 Jencks William Jencks William P 1986 Hydrogen Bonding between Solutes in Aqueous Solution J Am Chem Soc 108 14 4196 doi 10 1021 ja00274a058 Dillon P F 2012 Biophysics A Physiological Approach Cambridge University Press p 37 ISBN 978 1 139 50462 1 Baron Michel Giorgi Renault Sylviane Renault Jean Mailliet Patrick Carre Daniel Etienne Jean 1984 Heterocycles a fonction quinone V Reaction anormale de la butanedione avec la diamino 1 2 anthraquinone structure cristalline de la naphto 2 3 f quinoxalinedione 7 12 obtenue Can J Chem 62 3 526 530 doi 10 1139 v84 087 Laage Damien Hynes James T 2006 A Molecular Jump Mechanism for Water Reorientation Science 311 5762 832 5 Bibcode 2006Sci 311 832L doi 10 1126 science 1122154 PMID 16439623 S2CID 6707413 Markovitch Omer Agmon Noam 2008 The Distribution of Acceptor and Donor Hydrogen Bonds in Bulk Liquid Water Molecular Physics 106 2 485 Bibcode 2008MolPh 106 485M doi 10 1080 00268970701877921 S2CID 17648714 Shiao Wei Kuo 2018 Hydrogen Bonding in Polymer Materials Wiley VCH Politi Regina Harries Daniel 2010 Enthalpically driven peptide stabilization by protective osmolytes ChemComm 46 35 6449 6451 doi 10 1039 C0CC01763A PMID 20657920 Gilman Politi Regina Harries Daniel 2011 Unraveling the Molecular Mechanism of Enthalpy Driven Peptide Folding by Polyol Osmolytes Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation 7 11 3816 3828 doi 10 1021 ct200455n PMID 26598272 Hellgren M Kaiser C de Haij S Norberg A Hoog J O December 2007 A hydrogen bonding network in mammalian sorbitol dehydrogenase stabilizes the tetrameric state and is essential for the catalytic power Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 64 23 3129 38 doi 10 1007 s00018 007 7318 1 PMID 17952367 S2CID 22090973 Fernandez A Rogale K Scott Ridgway Scheraga H A June 2004 Inhibitor design by wrapping packing defects in HIV 1 proteins Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 101 32 11640 5 Bibcode 2004PNAS 10111640F doi 10 1073 pnas 0404641101 PMC 511032 PMID 15289598 Khashayar Rajabimoghadam Yousef Darwish Umyeena Bashir Dylan Pitman Sidney Eichelberger Maxime A Siegler Marcel Swart Isaac Garcia Bosch Aerobic Oxidation of Alcohols by Copper Complexes Bearing Redox Active Ligands with Tunable H Bonding https doi org 10 1021 jacs 8b08748 Ozeryanskii Valery A Pozharskii Alexander F Bienko Agnieszka J Sawka Dobrowolska Wanda Sobczyk Lucjan 2005 03 01 NHN Hydrogen Bonding in Protonated 1 8 Bis dimethylamino 2 7 dimethoxynaphthalene X ray Diffraction Infrared and Theoretical ab Initio and DFT Studies The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 109 8 1637 1642 Bibcode 2005JPCA 109 1637O doi 10 1021 jp040618l ISSN 1089 5639 PMID 16833488 a b Crabtree Robert H Siegbahn Per E M Eisenstein Odile Rheingold Arnold L Koetzle Thomas F 1996 A New Intermolecular Interaction Unconventional Hydrogen Bonds with Element Hydride Bonds as Proton Acceptor Acc Chem Res 29 7 348 354 doi 10 1021 ar950150s PMID 19904922 Lipinski CA December 2004 Lead and drug like compounds the rule of five revolution Drug Discovery Today Technologies 1 4 337 341 doi 10 1016 j ddtec 2004 11 007 PMID 24981612 o Hagan Steve Swainston Neil Handl Julia Kell Douglas B 2015 A rule of 0 5 for the metabolite likeness of approved pharmaceutical drugs Metabolomics 11 2 323 339 doi 10 1007 s11306 014 0733 z PMC 4342520 PMID 25750602 Further reading editGeorge A Jeffrey An Introduction to Hydrogen Bonding Topics in Physical Chemistry Oxford University Press US March 13 1997 ISBN 0 19 509549 9External links editThe Bubble Wall Audio slideshow from the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory explaining cohesion surface tension and hydrogen bonds isotopic effect on bond dynamics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hydrogen bond amp oldid 1201445692, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.