Artigo Revisado por pares

Hydration of the CH Groups in Dimethyl Sulfoxide Probed by NMR and IR

2000; American Chemical Society; Volume: 104; Issue: 47 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1021/jp001079x

ISSN

1520-6106

Autores

Kazuko Mizuno, Shingo Imafuji, Torayuki Ochi, Tomoko Ohta, Shiro Maeda,

Tópico(s)

Molecular Spectroscopy and Structure

Resumo

1H and 13C NMR of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO)/H2O mixtures were measured, together with the IR of DMSO/D2O mixtures, to study the effect of the polar SO group on hydration of the CH groups. Chemical shifts were determined by the external double reference method, which provides the in situ volume magnetic susceptibility indispensable to the correction of the chemical shifts. The chemical shift of the water protons as the measure of the polarization of the water in the mixtures, δH2O, increases from 3.6 ppm at the water mole fraction XH2O = 0.05 to 4.8 ppm, the value for pure water, at XH2O = 0.80. It exceeds 4.8 ppm in the region of XH2O > 0.80 at 23.3 °C, indicating the presence of anomalously polarized water molecules, so-called hydrophobic hydration. The frequencies of the CH stretching vibration bands for (DMSO)/D2O mixtures, ν(CH), increase with increasing XD2O, implying the progressive depolarization and contraction of the CH bonds. ν(CH) values take maxima at XD2O = 0.96. The chemical shift of the CH proton increases very slightly with increasing XH2O, whereas that of the CH carbon decreases, suggesting the polarization of the CH bonds contrary to the depolarization in them as shown by the blueshifts of the ν(CH) values. The pushball hydration model previously presented is applied to interpret the results; the electron of CH hydrogen is pushed toward the carbon atom due to dispersion interaction with the electrons of water oxygen. The pushing effect probed by the blueshifts of ν(CH) can be related to the increase in the polarization of the water molecules probed by δH2O. The redshifts in ν(CH) in the water rich extreme may be ascribed to a partial polarization of the CH bond resulting from hydrogen bonding interaction with highly polarized water molecules, in addition to the dispersion interaction. The role of the SO group in the hydration of the CH groups is discussed in comparison with the roles of the hydrophilic groups of acetone and tert-butyl alcohol.

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