Theoretical studies of nuclear magnetic resonance parameters for the proton-exchange pathways in porphyrin and porphycene.

The nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) parameters in porphyrin and porphycene have been calculated to investigate their changes during the process of proton exchange, using density-functional theory (DFT) for both the spin-spin coupling constants and the shielding constants. In addition, in calculations on the smaller 1,3-bis(arylimino)isoindoline molecule, we have tested the performance of our computational approach against experimental data. The calculated nuclear spin-spin coupling constants and shielding constants have been analyzed as functions of the progress of the proton transfer between two nitrogen atoms. The one-bond couplings between proton and nitrogen, dominated by the Fermi-contact term, decay steeply as the internuclear distance increases. The small changes in the intramolecular J(HH) coupling between two inner protons are mainly determined by the sum of relatively large spin-orbit terms. The isotropic shielding constant shows a strong deshielding of the nitrogen nuclei as the proton migrates away. Both the isotropic shielding of the exchanged protons and the shielding anisotropy exhibit a minimum close to the transition states.