Litcius/Paper detail

What Distinguishes the Strength and the Effect of a Lewis Acid: Analysis of the Gutmann–Beckett Method

Philipp Erdmann, Lutz Greb

2021Angewandte Chemie19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract IUPAC defines Lewis acidity as the thermodynamic tendency for Lewis pair formation. This strength property was recently specified as global Lewis acidity (gLA), and is gauged for example by the fluoride ion affinity. Experimentally, Lewis acidity is usually evaluated by the effect on a bound molecule, such as the induced 31 P NMR shift of triethylphosphine oxide in the Gutmann–Beckett (GB) method. This type of scaling was called effective Lewis acidity (eLA). Unfortunately, gLA and eLA often correlate poorly, but a reason for this is unknown. Hence, the strength and the effect of a Lewis acid are two distinct properties, but they are often granted interchangeably. The present work analyzes thermodynamic, NMR specific, and London dispersion effects on GB numbers for 130 Lewis acids by theory and experiment. The deformation energy of a Lewis acid is identified as the prime cause for the critical deviation between gLA and eLA but its correction allows a unification for the first time.

Topics & Concepts

Lewis acids and basesChemistryLewis numberComputational chemistryFluorideOrganic chemistryInorganic chemistryCatalysisCombustionSolid-state spectroscopy and crystallographyCrystallography and molecular interactionsAdvanced NMR Techniques and Applications