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A theoretical study of the tautomerism and vibrational spectra of 4,5-diamine-2,6-dimercaptopyrimidine

Abstracts

The 4,5-diamine-2,6-dimercaptopyrimidine (DADMcP) compound is an interesting multifunctional species exhibiting a rather complex tautomerism, encompassing nine tautomeric forms. Investigation of tautomerism in this compound has been carried out by means of FTIR spectroscopy, in association with ab-initio HF/SCF and DFT calculations. According to this study three tautomers are energetically favored; the thione form being the most stable one. The theoretical vibrational spectra of such tautomeric forms have been successfully simulated by means of DFT calculations, allowing the elucidation and assignment of the complex composition of the vibrational bands observed for the mixture of isomers.

mercaptopyrimidines; DFT calculations; tautomerism; spectral simulation


A 4,5-diamina-2,6-dimercaptopirimidina (DADMcP) constitui uma molécula multifuncional que apresenta uma tautomeria bastante complexa, com nove formas isoméricas possíveis. O estudo da tautomeria nesse composto foi realizado por meio da espectroscopia FTIR em associação com cálculos ab-initio HF/SCF e DFT. De acordo com os resultados teóricos, três tautômeros são favorecidos energeticamente, sendo a tiona a forma a mais estável. Os espectros vibracionais das formas tautoméricas mais estáveis foram simulados através de cálculos de DFT, permitindo a atribuição e elucidação do quadro complexo de bandas vibracionais observado experimentalmente, envolvendo a mistura de isômeros.


ARTICLE

A theoretical study of the tautomerism and vibrational spectra of 4,5-diamine-2,6-dimercaptopyrimidine

R. A. TimmI; J. A. BonacinI; A. L. B. FormigaII; H. E. TomaI, * * e-mail: henetoma@iq.usp.br

IInstituto de Química, Universidade de São Paulo, CP 26077, 05513-970 São Paulo-SP, Brazil

IIInstituto de Química, Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro-RJ, Brazil

ABSTRACT

The 4,5-diamine-2,6-dimercaptopyrimidine (DADMcP) compound is an interesting multifunctional species exhibiting a rather complex tautomerism, encompassing nine tautomeric forms. Investigation of tautomerism in this compound has been carried out by means of FTIR spectroscopy, in association with ab-initio HF/SCF and DFT calculations. According to this study three tautomers are energetically favored; the thione form being the most stable one. The theoretical vibrational spectra of such tautomeric forms have been successfully simulated by means of DFT calculations, allowing the elucidation and assignment of the complex composition of the vibrational bands observed for the mixture of isomers.

Keywords: mercaptopyrimidines, DFT calculations, tautomerism, spectral simulation

RESUMO

A 4,5-diamina-2,6-dimercaptopirimidina (DADMcP) constitui uma molécula multifuncional que apresenta uma tautomeria bastante complexa, com nove formas isoméricas possíveis. O estudo da tautomeria nesse composto foi realizado por meio da espectroscopia FTIR em associação com cálculos ab-initio HF/SCF e DFT. De acordo com os resultados teóricos, três tautômeros são favorecidos energeticamente, sendo a tiona a forma a mais estável. Os espectros vibracionais das formas tautoméricas mais estáveis foram simulados através de cálculos de DFT, permitindo a atribuição e elucidação do quadro complexo de bandas vibracionais observado experimentalmente, envolvendo a mistura de isômeros.

Introduction

Mercaptopyrimidines are interesting compounds, which have been widely studied over the past few years1 because of their many interesting applications, especially in coordination chemistry. By incorporating both S and N atoms in their structures, they are able to bind transition metal ions, acting as monodentate2 and more frequently as chelating and bridging ligands.3-5 These compounds exhibit tautomeric equilibrium between the thiol (> C-SH) and thione (> C=S) forms, as a consequence of the highly mobile protons in their structure.6-8 In fact, thione–thiol tautomeric equilibrium have attracted great experimental9-13 and theoretical interest14-17 in chemistry and biochemistry. These forms can mutually interchange via intramolecular proton transfer between the nitrogen and the nearby carbonyl sulfur. The interchange mechanism is solvent dependent; usually, the thione form predominates in polar solvent while the thiol is favorable in gas phase or nonpolar solvents.14,16,18,19

In this article, we present a theoretical study on the tautomerism of 4,5-diamine-2,6-dimercaptopyrimidine (DADMcP). This compound is an interesting multifunctional species capable of undergoing electrochemical polymerization and of sequestering transition metal ions.20 Experimental support for the existence of the tautomeric forms of this molecule was obtained from FTIR spectroscopy, in analogy with a recent work on violuric acid and 6-amino-5-nitrouracil.21 Further insight into the molecular structures was provided by theoretical calculations using ab-initio Hartree-Fock Self-Consistent Field (HF/SCF) and the density functional theory (DFT) approaches.

Experimental

The compound 4,5-diamine-2,6-dimercaptopyrimidine was obtained from Aldrich. FTIR spectra of the solid samples in the range of 4,000-400 cm-1 were recorded on a Shimadzu FTIR-8300 spectrophotometer, using KBr pellets. The NIR spectra in the range of 29,000-4,000 cm-1 were recorded on a FieldSpec fiber optics instrument from Analytical Spectral Devices (ASD).

Computational calculations were carried out using the GAMESS(R4) software22 for geometry optimization. In all cases, a convergence criterion of 10-4 kcal Å-1 mol-1 was used in a conjugate gradient algorithm. Molecular orbitals were expanded using the atomic 6-311G(d,p) basis set to solve the Hartree-Fock (HF) equations as well as the Kohn-Sham ones (DFT). The gradient-corrected density functional methodology employed in DFT calculation was the B3LYP hybrid.23-25 The harmonic vibrational frequencies and intensities were calculated at the same levels of theory with the analytical evaluation of second derivatives of energy as a function of atomic coordinates and the calculated intensities were utilized to generate the theoretical spectra. Low and high frequencies were scaled by factors of 1.01 and 1.06, respectively, and zero-point energies by a factor of 0.9806, as recommended by Scott and Radom.26

The theoretical vibrational spectra shown in Figure 3, were calculated from the sum of Gaussian shaped bands, based on the equation:24




where T is transmittance, and assuming half-bandwidths (D1/2) of 40 cm-1. The sum in the equation includes all allowed vibration transitions with energies, wI (expressed in cm-1), and oscillator strengths, fI which were obtained from the theoretical calculations. The total integrated intensity is equal to the sum of the oscillator strengths:

4,319 x 10-9òe(w)dw =fI

Results and Discussion

Theoretical investigation of DADMcP compound showed nine possible tautomers, here denoted 1 to 9 (Figure 1). The geometry of each one was optimized by ab-initio RHF/SCF and DFT methods. More than one conformer was found for each tautomer, and the most stable conformer was chosen for further analysis. The energies of each tautomer are shown in Table 1. The usefulness of DFT methods to deal with the tautomerism of nucleic acid bases is a rather well established point. In particular, vibrational frequencies and zero-point energies have been estimated very accurately, and frequently with errors smaller than those reported using MP2 theory27-29. According to HF/SCF and DFT calculations, the order of stability is 2 > 3 > 1 > 6 > 9 > 5 > 4 > 7 > 8. The dithione form is expected to be the most stable one (tautomer 2).

Based on these results, the vibrational spectra of the three most stable tautomers of DADMcP (1, 2 and 3) were calculated theoretically, as shown in Figure 3. In fact, the DFT frequencies provided a good insight into the vibrational structure of the three tautomeric species, as shown in Tables 2-4.

Zero-point vibrational energies for the three tautomers confirmed the stability order, but the energy gap is large enough to indicate tautomer 2 should predominate in gas phase. However, for this tautomer, the comparison of the theoretical and the experimental FTIR spectrum of the DADMcP species (Figure 3) shows that the number of bands in the experimental spectrum is higher than for the predicted one, specially in the 400-1700 cm-1 region. For this reason, the occurrence of a mixture of tautomers seems indeed rather plausible in the solid state.

The experimental infrared spectrum of DADMcP is shown in Figure 2, revealing a rather complex composition of the vibration bands for this compound. In a first approximation, the group of broad bands from 3600 to 2800 cm-1 can be attributed to nas(N-H) and ns(N-H) of the free and hydrogen bonded molecules in the solid. The shoulders around 2600 cm-1 can be tentatively ascribed to n(S-H). The bands at 1565 and 1647 cm-1 can be attributed to d(N-H) in NH2 groups. The bands at 1300 and 1346 cm-1 can be assigned to n(C=C) + n(C=N) vibrations. The remaining bands are associated with amine groups and aromatic ring vibrations.

A correlation study, trying to match each pair of experimental and theoretical vibrational band, has been carried out, as shown in Tables 2-4. Tautomer 1 exhibits a dithiol structure. The characteristic n(N-H) vibrational peaks expected for this isomer at 3521, 3387, 3319 at 3261 cm-1 (Table 2), practically coincide with the experimental bands observed at 3565, 3379, 3300 and 3230 cm-1 for DADMcP. The n(S-H) vibrations appear as weak bands in the theoretical spectrum of isomer 1, at 2678 and 2662 cm-1 (about 2% relative intensity), corresponding to the weak shoulders observed at 2693 and 2577 cm-1, respectively.

In the case of the tautomer 2, which corresponds to the dithione form, the n(N-H) vibrations are very close to those of tautomer 1, however there is no (S-H) band (Table 3). Unfortunately, in this case, the n(C=S) vibration does not correspond to a characteristic peak, since it always occurs in combination with n(C-N) and n(C-C) vibrations, e.g. at 1294 cm-1, in Table 2.

In the case of tautomer 3, because of its mixed thiol and thione features, its theoretical vibrational spectrum exhibits a close similarity with those of tautomers 1 and 3, as shown in Table 4.

Therefore, one can see that the infrared spectra fit fairly well those predicted by the theoretical model, corroborating the existence of a mixture of tautomers.

Additional evidence for the occurrence of the thiol tautomers (1 or 3) was obtained from the near-infrared (NIR) spectrum of the DADMcP species, as shown in Figure 4. In fact, it should be mentioned that the NIR region is being increasingly exploited in analytical chemistry, because of the occurrence of characteristic overtone and combination bands of the C-H, N-H, O-H and S-H fundamental vibrations. In the DADMcP compound, only the N-H and S-H vibrations30 can contribute to the NIR spectrum, occurring at frequencies approximately two times those observed for the fundamental ones in the middle IR region, i.e., at 6653, 6473, 6293 and 4968, 4778 cm-1, respectively (Figure 4).


Conclusions

Due to the thione–thiol equilibrium, the 4,5-diamine-2,6-dimercaptopyrimidine compound can exhibit nine tautomeric forms. HF/SCF and DFT calculations support the existence of at least two major tautomeric forms of which the dithione tautomer is the most stable one. A successful simulation of the vibrational spectra of the most stable tautomers is reported, showing a good agreement with the experimental bands in the FTIR spectrum. According to the theoretical and experimental evidence, tautomers 2 and 3 should be the predominant species in the solid state. This conclusion is corroborated by the S-H overtone band, in the NIR spectrum.

Acknowledgments

The support from FAPESP, CNPq, and IM2C is gratefully acknowledged.

Received: October 9, 2007

Published on the web: February 22, 2008

FAPESP helped in meeting the publication costs of this article.

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  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      08 Apr 2008
    • Date of issue
      2008

    History

    • Accepted
      22 Feb 2008
    • Received
      09 Oct 2007
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