posted on 2008-02-21, 00:00authored byGiorgio Celebre, Giorgio Cinacchi, Giuseppina De Luca, Barbara M. Giuliano, Francesca Iemma, Sonia Melandri
The conformational distribution of methyl phenyl sulfoxide (a molecule representative of a very important
class of reagents widely used in asymmetric synthesis) has been studied in two different phases of matter
(gas phase and solution) by a comprehensive approach including theoretical calculations, microwave
spectroscopy, liquid crystal NMR experiments, and atomistic molecular dynamics computer simulations. The
aim was to investigate the combined action of intra- and intermolecular interactions in determining the
molecule's conformational equilibrium, upon which important physicochemical properties (inter alia, the
chemoselectivity) significantly depend. Basically, the results converge in describing the tendency of the molecule
to favor stable conformations governed by intramolecular interactions (in particular, the expected optimization
between steric repulsion and conjugation of π systems). However, significant solvent effects (whose “absolute”
magnitude is actually difficult to assess, due to a certain “method-dependence” of the results) have been also
detected.