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Sensory Perception of Non-Deuterated and Deuterated Organic Compounds
Authors:Prof. Dr. Tunga Salthammer  Friederike Monegel  Nicole Schulz  Dr. Erik Uhde  Prof. Dr. Stefan Grimme  Jakob Seibert  Prof. Dr. Uwe Hohm  Dr. Wolf-Ulrich Palm
Affiliation:1. Department of Material Analysis and Indoor Chemistry, Fraunhofer WKI, 38108 Braunschweig, Germany;2. Mulliken Center for Theoretical Chemistry, Institute for Physical and Theoretical Chemistry, University of Bonn, 53115 Bonn, Germany;3. Institute of Physical and Theoretical Chemistry, University of Braunschweig—Institute of Technology, 38106 Braunschweig, Germany;4. Institute of Sustainable and Environmental Chemistry, Leuphana University Lüneburg, 21335 Lüneburg, Germany
Abstract:The chemical background of olfactory perception has been subject of intensive research, but no available model can fully explain the sense of smell. There are also inconsistent results on the role of the isotopology of molecules. In experiments with human subjects it was found that the isotope effect is weak with acetone and D6-acetone. In contrast, clear differences were observed in the perception of octanoic acid and D15-octanoic acid. Furthermore, a trained sniffer dog was initially able to distinguish between these isotopologues of octanoic acid. In chromatographic measurements, the respective deuterated molecule showed weaker interaction with a non-polar liquid phase. Quantum chemical calculations give evidence that deuterated octanoic acid binds more strongly to a model receptor than non-deuterated. In contrast, the binding of the non-deuterated molecule is stronger with acetone. The isotope effect is calculated in the framework of statistical mechanics. It results from a complicated interplay between various thermostatistical contributions to the non-covalent free binding energies and it turns out to be very molecule-specific. The vibrational terms including non-classical zero-point energies play about the same role as rotational/translational contributions and are larger than bond length effects for the differential isotope perception of odor for which general rules cannot be derived.
Keywords:computational chemistry  human subjects  isotopologues  odor perception  trained sniffer dogs
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