2-Substituted <i>N</i>-acyl-piperidine
is a widespread
and important structural motif, found in approximately 500 currently
available structures, and present in nearly 30 pharmaceutically active
compounds. Restricted rotation of the acyl substituent in such molecules
can give rise to two distinct chemical environments. Here we demonstrate,
using NMR studies and density functional theory modeling of the lowest
energy structures of 5-acyl-6,7-dihydrothieno[3,2-<i>c</i>]pyridine derivatives, that the amide <i>E</i>:<i>Z</i> equilibrium is affected by non-covalent interactions between
the amide oxygen and adjacent aromatic protons. Structural predictions
were used to design molecules that promote either the <i>E</i>- or <i>Z</i>-amide conformation, enabling preparation
of compounds with a tailored conformational ratio, as proven by NMR
studies. Analysis of the available X-ray data of a variety of published <i>N</i>-acyl-piperidine-containing compounds further indicates
that these molecules are also clustered in the two observed conformations.
This finding emphasizes that directed conformational isomerism has
significant implications for the design of both small molecules and
larger amide-containing molecular architectures