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An unexplored material of copper boride has been realized recently in two-dimensional form at a (111) surface of the fcc copper crystal. Here, one-dimensional (1-D) boron growth was observed on the Cu(110) surface, as probed by atomically resolved scanning probe microscopy. The 1-D copper boride was composed of quasi-periodic atomic chains periodically aligned parallel to each other, as confirmed by Fourier transform analysis. The 1-D growth unexpectedly proceeded across surface steps in a self-assembled manner and extended over several 100 nm. The long-range formation of a 1-D quasi-periodic structure on a surface has been theoretically modeled as a 1-D quasi-crystal and the predicted conditions matched the structural parameters obtained by the experimental work here. The quasi-periodic 1-D copper boride system enabled a way to examine 1-D quasi-crystallinity on an actual material.
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The structural stability of the extensively studied organic-inorganic hybrid methylammonium tetrel halide perovskite semiconductors, MATtX3 (MA = CH3NH3+; Tt = Ge, Sn, Pb; X = Cl, Br, I), arises as a result of non-covalent interactions between an organic cation (CH3NH3+) and an inorganic anion (TtX3-). However, the basic understanding of the underlying chemical bonding interactions in these systems that link the ionic moieties together in complex configurations is still limited. In this study, ion pair models constituting the organic and inorganic ions were regarded as the repeating units of periodic crystal systems and density functional theory simulations were performed to elucidate the nature of the non-covalent interactions between them. It is demonstrated that not only the charge-assisted N-H···X and C-H···X hydrogen bonds but also the C-N···X pnictogen bonds interact to stabilize the ion pairs and to define their geometries in the gas phase. Similar interactions are also responsible for the formation of crystalline MATtX3 in the low-temperature phase, some of which have been delineated in previous studies. In contrast, the Tt···X tetrel bonding interactions, which are hidden as coordinate bonds in the crystals, play a vital role in holding the inorganic anionic moieties (TtX3-) together. We have demonstrated that each Tt in each [CH3NH3+â¢TtX3-] ion pair has the capacity to donate three tetrel (σ-hole) bonds to the halides of three nearest neighbor TtX3- units, thus causing the emergence of an infinite array of 3D TtX64- octahedra in the crystalline phase. The TtX44- octahedra are corner-shared to form cage-like inorganic frameworks that host the organic cation, leading to the formation of functional tetrel halide perovskite materials that have outstanding optoelectronic properties in the solid state. We harnessed the results using the quantum theory of atoms in molecules, natural bond orbital, molecular electrostatic surface potential and independent gradient models to validate these conclusions.
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Hidrogênio , Óxidos , Modelos MolecularesRESUMO
The ion pairs [Cs+â¢TtX3-] (Tt = Pb, Sn, Ge; X = I, Br, Cl) are the building blocks of all-inorganic cesium tetrel halide perovskites in 3D, CsTtX3, that are widely regarded as blockbuster materials for optoelectronic applications such as in solar cells. The 3D structures consist of an anionic inorganic tetrel halide framework stabilized by the cesium cations (Cs+). We use computational methods to show that the geometrical connectivity between the inorganic monoanions, [TtX3-]∞, that leads to the formation of the TtX64- octahedra and the 3D inorganic perovskite architecture is the result of the joint effect of polarization and coulombic forces driven by alkali and tetrel bonds. Depending on the nature and temperature phase of these perovskite systems, the Tt···X tetrel bonds are either indistinguishable or somehow distinguishable from Tt-X coordinate bonds. The calculation of the potential on the electrostatic surface of the Tt atom in molecular [Cs+â¢TtX3-] provides physical insight into why the negative anions [TtX3-] attract each other when in close proximity, leading to the formation of the CsTtX3 tetrel halide perovskites in the solid state. The inter-molecular (and inter-ionic) geometries, binding energies, and charge density-based topological properties of sixteen [Cs+â¢TtX3-] ion pairs, as well as some selected oligomers [Cs+â¢PbI3-]n (n = 2, 3, 4), are discussed.
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Compostos de Cálcio , Compostos Inorgânicos , Césio , SemicondutoresRESUMO
Layered two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides and their heterostructures are of current interest, owing to the diversity of their applications in many areas of materials nanoscience and technologies. With this in mind, we have examined the three molecular dimers of the tungsten dichalcogenide series, (WCh2)2 (Ch = S, Se, Te), using density functional theory to provide insight into which interactions, and their specific characteristics, are responsible for the interfacial/interlayer region in the room temperature 2H phase of WCh2 crystals. Our calculations at various levels of theory suggested that the Te···Te chalcogen bonding in (WTe2)2 is weak, whereas the Se···Se and S···S bonding interactions in (WSe2)2 and (WS2)2, respectively, are of the van der Waals type. The presence and character of Ch···Ch chalcogen bonding interactions in the dimers of (WCh2)2 are examined with a number of theoretical approaches and discussed, including charge-density-based approaches, such as the quantum theory of atoms in molecules, interaction region indicator, independent gradient model, and reduced density gradient non-covalent index approaches. The charge-density-based topological features are shown to be concordant with the results that originate from the extrema of potential on the electrostatic surfaces of WCh2 monomers. A natural bond orbital analysis has enabled us to suggest a number of weak hyperconjugative charge transfer interactions between the interacting monomers that are responsible for the geometry of the (WCh2)2 dimers at equilibrium. In addition to other features, we demonstrate that there is no so-called van der Waals gap between the monolayers in two-dimensional layered transition metal tungsten dichalcogenides, which are gapless, and that the (WCh2)2 dimers may be prototypes for a basic understanding of the physical chemistry of the chemical bonding environments associated with the local interfacial/interlayer regions in layered 2H-WCh2 nanoscale systems.
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Calcogênios/química , Compostos de Tungstênio/química , Tungstênio/química , Calcogênios/metabolismo , Ligação de Hidrogênio , Modelos Moleculares , Teoria Quântica , Eletricidade Estática , Elementos de Transição , Compostos de Tungstênio/metabolismoRESUMO
The pnictogen bond, a somewhat overlooked supramolecular chemical synthon known since the middle of the last century, is one of the promising types of non-covalent interactions yet to be fully understood by recognizing and exploiting its properties for the rational design of novel functional materials. Its bonding modes, energy profiles, vibrational structures and charge density topologies, among others, have yet to be comprehensively delineated, both theoretically and experimentally. In this overview, attention is largely centered on the nature of nitrogen-centered pnictogen bonds found in organic-inorganic hybrid metal halide perovskites and closely related structures deposited in the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD) and the Inorganic Chemistry Structural Database (ICSD). Focusing on well-characterized structures, it is shown that it is not merely charge-assisted hydrogen bonds that stabilize the inorganic frameworks, as widely assumed and well-documented, but simultaneously nitrogen-centered pnictogen bonding, and, depending on the atomic constituents of the organic cation, other non-covalent interactions such as halogen bonding and/or tetrel bonding, are also contributors to the stabilizing of a variety of materials in the solid state. We have shown that competition between pnictogen bonding and other interactions plays an important role in determining the tilting of the MX6 (X = a halogen) octahedra of metal halide perovskites in one, two and three-dimensions. The pnictogen interactions are identified to be directional even in zero-dimensional crystals, a structural feature in many engineered ordered materials; hence an interplay between them and other non-covalent interactions drives the structure and the functional properties of perovskite materials and enabling their application in, for example, photovoltaics and optoelectronics. We have demonstrated that nitrogen in ammonium and its derivatives in many chemical systems acts as a pnictogen bond donor and contributes to conferring stability, and hence functionality, to crystalline perovskite systems. The significance of these non-covalent interactions should not be overlooked, especially when the focus is centered on the rationale design and discovery of such highly-valued materials.
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Compostos de Cálcio , Óxidos , Compostos de Cálcio/química , Halogênios/química , Nitrogênio , Óxidos/química , TitânioRESUMO
A stibium bond, i.e., a non-covalent interaction formed by covalently or coordinately bound antimony, occurs in chemical systems when there is evidence of a net attractive interaction between the electrophilic region associated with an antimony atom and a nucleophile in another, or the same molecular entity. This is a pnictogen bond and are likely formed by the elements of the pnictogen family, Group 15, of the periodic table, and is an inter- or intra-molecular non-covalent interaction. This overview describes a set of illustrative crystal systems that were stabilized (at least partially) by means of stibium bonds, together with other non-covalent interactions (such as hydrogen bonds and halogen bonds), retrieved from either the Cambridge Structure Database (CSD) or the Inorganic Crystal Structure Database (ICSD). We demonstrate that these databases contain hundreds of crystal structures of various dimensions in which covalently or coordinately bound antimony atoms in molecular entities feature positive sites that productively interact with various Lewis bases containing O, N, F, Cl, Br, and I atoms in the same or different molecular entities, leading to the formation of stibium bonds, and hence, being partially responsible for the stability of the crystals. The geometric features, pro-molecular charge density isosurface topologies, and extrema of the molecular electrostatic potential model were collectively examined in some instances to illustrate the presence of Sb-centered pnictogen bonding in the representative crystal systems considered.
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Antimônio , Halogênios , Halogênios/química , Ligação de Hidrogênio , Modelos Moleculares , Eletricidade EstáticaRESUMO
In chemical systems, the arsenic-centered pnictogen bond, or simply the arsenic bond, occurs when there is evidence of a net attractive interaction between the electrophilic region associated with a covalently or coordinately bound arsenic atom in a molecular entity and a nucleophile in another or the same molecular entity. It is the third member of the family of pnictogen bonds formed by the third atom of the pnictogen family, Group 15 of the periodic table, and is an inter- or intramolecular noncovalent interaction. In this overview, we present several illustrative crystal structures deposited into the Cambridge Structure Database (CSD) and the Inorganic Chemistry Structural Database (ICSD) during the last and current centuries to demonstrate that the arsenic atom in molecular entities has a significant ability to act as an electrophilic agent to make an attractive engagement with nucleophiles when in close vicinity, thereby forming σ-hole or π-hole interactions, and hence driving (in part, at least) the overall stability of the system's crystalline phase. This overview does not include results from theoretical simulations reported by others as none of them address the signatory details of As-centered pnictogen bonds. Rather, we aimed at highlighting the interaction modes of arsenic-centered σ- and π-holes in the rationale design of crystal lattices to demonstrate that such interactions are abundant in crystalline materials, but care has to be taken to identify them as is usually done with the much more widely known noncovalent interactions in chemical systems, halogen bonding and hydrogen bonding. We also demonstrate that As-centered pnictogen bonds are usually accompanied by other primary and secondary interactions, which reinforce their occurrence and strength in most of the crystal structures illustrated. A statistical analysis of structures deposited into the CSD was performed for each interaction type As···D (D = N, O, S, Se, Te, F, Cl, Br, I, arene's π system), thus providing insight into the typical nature of As···D interaction distances and ∠R-As···D bond angles of these interactions in crystals, where R is the remainder of the molecular entity.
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Arsênio , Halogênios/química , Ligação de HidrogênioRESUMO
The phosphorus bond in chemical systems, which is an inter- or intramolecular noncovalent interaction, occurs when there is evidence of a net attractive interaction between an electrophilic region associated with a covalently or coordinately bonded phosphorus atom in a molecular entity and a nucleophile in another, or the same, molecular entity. It is the second member of the family of pnictogen bonds, formed by the second member of the pnictogen family of the periodic table. In this overview, we provide the reader with a snapshot of the nature, and possible occurrences, of phosphorus-centered pnictogen bonding in illustrative chemical crystal systems drawn from the ICSD (Inorganic Crystal Structure Database) and CSD (Cambridge Structural Database) databases, some of which date back to the latter part of the last century. The illustrative systems discussed are expected to assist as a guide to researchers in rationalizing phosphorus-centered pnictogen bonding in the rational design of molecular complexes, crystals, and materials and their subsequent characterization.
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The wide occurrence of halogen-centered noncovalent interactions in crystal growth and design prompted this study, which includes a mini review of recent advances in the field. Particular emphasis is placed on providing compelling theoretical evidence of the formation of these interactions between sites of positive electrostatic potential, as well as between sites of negative electrostatic potential, localized on the electrostatic surfaces of the bound fluorine atoms in a prototypical system, hexafluoropropylene (C3 F6 ), upon its interaction with another same molecule to form (C3 F6 )2 dimers. The existence of σ- and π-hole interactions is shown for the stable dimers. Even so, weakly bound interactions locally responsible in holding the molecular fragments together cannot and should not be overlooked since they are partly responsible for determining the overall geometry of the crystal. The results of combined quantum theory of atoms in molecules, molecular electrostatic surface potential, and reduced density gradient noncovalent interaction analyses showed that these latter interactions do indeed play a role in the stability and growth of crystalline C3 F6 itself and the (C3 F6 )2 dimers. A symmetry adapted perturbation theory energy decomposition analysis leads to the conclusion that a great majority of the (C3 F6 )2 dimers examined are the consequence of dispersion (and electrostatics), with nonnegligible contribution from polarization, which together competes with an exchange repulsion component to determine the equilibrium geometries. In a few structures of the (C3 F6 )2 dimer, the fluorine is found to serve as a six-center five-bond donor/acceptor, as found for carbon in other systems (Malischewski and Seppelt, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2017, 56, 368). © 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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Several recent studies have shown that chalcogen bonds originate from the σ-holes localized on the electron-deficient surface of the Group 16 atoms (sulfur, selenium and tellurium) in molecules; however, the oxygen atom in molecules does not appear to form such a bond. In this study, we have considered oxygen difluoride (OF2) as a prototypical Lewis acid, and 11 Lewis bases as partner interacting species (CH3F, CH3Cl, CH3Br, H2CO, HFCO, HF, SO, CH3CN, PN, HSCN and HCN). Their complexes are examined using DFT-M06-2X and ab initio first-principles calculations at the MP2 level of theory, in conjunction with Dunning's all-electron correlated basis set aug-cc-pVTZ. The results that emerge from the equilibrium geometries, molecular electrostatic surface potential, second order natural bond orbital, quantum theory of atoms in molecules, reduced density gradient and independent gradient model noncovalent analyses tools, as well as from binding energy calculations, demonstrate that oxygen is indeed capable of forming a chalcogen bond. We show that the σ-holes on O along the F-O bond extensions in OF2 are positive, and can readily participate in chalcogen bonding (and other secondary interactions) with Lewis bases, thus providing stability to the geometries of all the 12 binary complexes examined. Finally, we demonstrate that without invoking charge density topologies the often used electrostatic surface potential model is certainly inadequate for the exploration of the noncovalent topology of bonding interactions in the majority of the dimers examined.
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Can two sites of positive electrostatic potential localized on the outer surfaces of two halogen atoms (and especially fluorine) in different molecular domains attract each other to form a non-covalent engagement? The answer, perhaps counterintuitive, is yes as shown here using the electronic structures and binding energies of the interactions for a series of 22 binary complexes formed between identical or different atomic domains in similar or related halogen-substituted molecules containing fluorine. These were obtained using various computational approaches, including density functional and ab initio first-principles theories with M06-2X, RHF, MP2 and CCSD(T). The physical chemistry of non-covalent bonding interactions in these complexes was explored using both Quantum Theory of Atoms in Molecules and Symmetry Adapted Perturbation Theories. The surface reactivity of the 17 monomers was examined using the Molecular Electrostatic Surface Potential approach. We have demonstrated inter alia that the dispersion term, the significance of which is not always appreciated, which emerges either from an energy decomposition analysis, or from a correlated calculation, plays a structure-determining role, although other contributions arising from electrostatic, exchange-repulsion and polarization effects are also important. The 0.0010 a.u. isodensity envelope, often used for mapping the electrostatic potential is found to provide incorrect information about the complete nature of the surface reactive sites on some of the isolated monomers, and can lead to a misinterpretation of the results obtained.
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Flúor/química , Modelos Químicos , Modelos Moleculares , Eletricidade Estática , Halogênios/químicaRESUMO
Coulomb's law states that like charges repel, and unlike charges attract. However, it has recently been theoretically revealed that two similarly charged conducting spheres will almost always attract each other when both are in close proximity. Using multiscale first principles calculations, we illustrate practical examples of several intermolecular complexes that are formed by the consequences of attraction between positive atomic sites of similar or dissimilar electrostatic surface potential on interacting molecules. The results of the quantum theory of atoms in molecules and symmetry adapted perturbation theory support the attraction between the positive sites, characterizing the Fâ¢â¢â¢X (X = F, Cl, Br) intermolecular interactions in a series of 20 binary complexes as closed-shell type, although the molecular electrostatic surface potential approach does not (a failure!). Dispersion that has an r-6 dependence, where r is the equilibrium distance of separation, is found to be the sole driving force pushing the two positive sites to attract. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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Methylammonium lead trihalides and their derivatives are photovoltaic materials. CH3 NH3 PbI3 is the most efficient light harvester among all the known halide perovskites (PSCs). It is regarded as unsuitable for long-term stable solar cells, thus it is necessary to develop other types of PSC materials to achieve stable PSCs (Wang et al., Nat. Energy 2016, 2, 16195). Because of this, various research efforts are on-going to discover novel lead-based or lead-free single/double PSCs, which can be stable, synthesizable, transportable, abundant and efficient in solar energy conversion. Keeping these factors in mind, we report here the electronic structures, energetic stabilities and some materials properties (viz. band structures, density of states spectra and photo-carrier masses) of the PSC chloroammonium lead triiodide (ClNH3 PbI3 ). This emerges through compositional engineering that often focuses on B- and Y-site substitutions within the domain of the BMY3 PSC stoichiometry. ClNH3 PbI3 is found to be stable as orthorhombic and pseudocubic polymorphs, which are analogous with the low and high temperature polymorphs of CH3 NH3 PbI3 . The bandgap of ClNH3 PbI3 (values between 1.28 and 1.60 eV) is found to be comparable with that of CH3 NH3 PbI3 , (1.58 eV), both obtained with periodic DFT at the PBE level of theory. Spin orbit coupling is shown to have a pronounced effect on both the magnitude and character of the bandgap. The computed results show that ClNH3 PbI3 may act as a competitor for CH3 NH3 PbI3 for photovoltaics. © 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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We examine the equilibrium structure and properties of six fully or partially fluorinated hydrocarbons and several of their binary complexes using computational methods. In the monomers, the electrostatic surface of the fluorine is predicted to be either entirely negative or weakly positive. However, its lateral sites are always negative. This enables the fluorine to display an anisotropic distribution of charge density on its electrostatic surface. While this is the electrostatic surface scenario of the fluorine atom, its negative sites in some of these monomers are shown to have the potential to engage in attractive engagements with the negative site(s) on the same atom in another molecule of the same type, or a molecule of a different type, to form bimolecular complexes. This is revealed by analyzing the results of current state-of-the-art computational approaches such as DFT, together with those obtained from the quantum theory of atoms in molecules, molecular electrostatic surface potential and symmetry adapted perturbation theories. We demonstrate that the intermolecular interaction energy arising in part from the universal London dispersion, which has been underappreciated for decades, is an essential factor in explaining the attraction between the negative sites, although energy arising from polarization strengthens the extent of the intermolecular interactions in these complexes.
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A set of six binary complexes that feature iodine-centered halogen bonding, extracted from structures deposited in the Cambridge Structure Database, has been examined computationally using density functional theory calculations with the M06-2X global hybrid, and dispersion corrected B3LYP-D3 and B97-D3, to determine their equilibrium geometries, binding energies and electronic properties. The results show that gas phase calculations are very informative in evaluating what occurs in the solid state, even though these calculations ignore the importance of lattice packing and counter ion effects. The calculated binding energies for the non-covalent interactions responsible for these complexes lie between -4.15 and -7.48 kcal mol-1 (M06-2X), which enables us to characterize them as weak-to-moderate in strength. The basis set superposition error energies are calculated to vary between 0.60 and 2.42 kcal mol-1 for all the complexes examined, even though an all-electron QZP basis set used in the analysis was of quadrupole-ζ (plus polarization) quality. Dispersion is found to have a profound effect on the binding energy of some of these complexes, and was estimated to be as large as 5.0 kcal mol-1. For one complex, the crystal geometry could not be precisely reproduced using a gas phase calculation. While both halogen- and hydrogen-bonding interactions were found competitive, they cooperate with each other to determine the stable configuration of the binary complex. The molecular electrostatic surface potential, quantum theory of atoms in molecules, and reduced density gradient non-covalent Interaction models were utilized to arrive at a fundamental understanding of the various inter- and intra-molecular molecular interactions involved, as well as some other previously-overlooked non-covalent interactions that emerge in the modelling.
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Methylammonium lead iodide (CH3 NH3 PbI3 ) perovskite compound has produced a remarkable breakthrough in the photovoltaic history of solar cell technology because of its outstanding device-based performance as a light-harvesting semiconductor. Whereas the experimental and theoretical studies of this system in the solid state have been numerously reported in the last 4 years, its fundamental cluster physics is yet to be exploited. To this end, this study has performed theoretical investigations using DFT-M06-2X/ADZP to examine the principal geometrical, electronic, topological, and orbital properties of the CH3 NH3 PbI3 molecular building block. The intermolecular hydrogen bonded interactions examined for the most important conformers of the system are found to be unusually strong, with binding energies lying between -93.53 and -125.11 kcal mol-1 (beyond the covalent limit, -40 kcal mol-1 ), enabling us to classify the underlying interactions as ultra-strong type since their characteristic properties are unidentical with those have already been proposed as very strong, strong, moderate, weak, and van der Waals. Based on this, together with the unusually high charge transfers, strong hyperconjugative interactions, sophisticated topologies of the charge density, and short intermolecular distances of separation, we have characterized the conformers of CH3 NH3 PbI3 as Mulliken inner complexes. The consequences of these, as well as of the ultra-strong interactions, in designing novel functional nanomaterials are outlined. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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A large number of fully halogenated benzene derivatives containing the fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine atoms have been experimentally synthesized both as single- and co-crystals (e.g., Desiraju et al., Chem. Eur. J. 2006, 12, 2222), yet the natures of the halogen ··· halogen interactions between the vicinal halogens in these compounds within the intramolecular domain are undisclosed. Given a fundamental understanding of these interactions is incredibly important in many areas of chemical, biological, supramolecular, and material sciences, we present here our newly discovered theoretical results that delineate whilst the nature of an F···F interaction in a pair of two adjacent fluorine atoms in either of the hexafluorobenzene and 1,4-dibromotetrafluorobenzene compounds examined is almost unclear, each of the latter three hexahalogenated benzene derivatives (viz., C6 Cl6 , C6 Br6 , and C6 I6 ), and each of the seven of their fully mixed hexahalogenated benzene analogues, are found to be stabilized by means of a number of halogen···halogen interactions, each a form of long-range attraction within the intramolecular domain. The Molecular Electrostatic Surface Potential model was found to be unsurprisingly unsuitable in unraveling any of the aforesaid attractions between the halogen atoms. However, such interactions successfully enunciated by a set of noncovalent interaction descriptors of geometrical, topological, and electrostatic origins. These latter properties were extracted combining the results of the Density Functional Theory electronic structure calculations with those revealed from Atoms in Molecules, and Reduced Density Gradient charge density-based topological calculations, and are expounded in detail to formalize the conclusions. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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Derivados de Benzeno/química , Halogênios/química , Teoria QuânticaRESUMO
The F(δ-)···F(δ-) intermolecular synthon was recently observed to be useful for generating a two-dimensional layered supramolecular architecture on the Ag(111) surface (Kawai, et al., ACS Nano, 2015). This was formed when the entirely negative covalently bonded fluorine atoms in phenyleneethynylene(bis(2,3,5,6-tetrafluoro-4-(2,3,4,5,6-pentafluorophenylethynyl)phenyl)-ethyne (BPEPE-F18)) were in close proximity to the same atoms in another BPEPE-F18 molecule. With a view to provide rigorous insights into the physical chemistry of such an intermolecular synthon, we have selected perfluorobenzene (C6F6) as a model compound, and have performed extensive DFT-M06-2X/6-311++G(d,p) investigations on a number of its homomolecular dimers, trimers, and tetramers. Of the twelve (C6F6)2 dimers investigated, a displaced-parallel arrangement with an uncorrected binding energy (ΔE) of -7.4 kcal mol(-1) was found to be the most stable, and an incorporation of the basis set superposition error (BSSE) has significantly reduced its ΔE to -4.7 kcal mol(-1). Besides, the ΔE for a minimum-energy least stable conformation of the same dimer, which involves a single σhole(-)···σhole(-) type F(δ-)···F(δ-) intermolecular bonding interaction, amounts to -0.62 and -0.24 kcal mol(-1) without and with BSSE, respectively. The geometry of another conformation of the dimer, which accompanies a set of three F(δ-)···F(δ-) intermolecular interactions somehow similarly to those observed in the layered supramolecular structure formed by the BPEPE-F18 molecules, lies at a relative energy of 6.5 kcal mol(-1) above the most stable conformation. Passing from the latter dimer to an analogous (C6F6)3 trimer, as well as from the trimer to an analogous (C6F6)4 tetramer, the latter two clusters comprising windmill-type F(δ-)···F(δ-) intermolecular topologies, we have marked a preferential increase in the value of ΔE from -0.94 (dimer) to -2.76 (trimer) to -4.49 kcal mol(-1) (tetramer), thereby suggesting the presence of cooperative binding. An energy decomposition analysis has revealed that dispersion and polarization are the principal driving forces that bring the C6F6 molecules together in complex configurations. While a reasonable agreement was found between the charge density based topological results of the intermolecular bonding interactions that emerged from the application of Quantum Theory of Atoms in Molecules (QTAIM) and Reduced Density Gradient approaches to all the polymeric compounds, the results of the latter method were found to be too vague especially near the (3, +1) ring critical point regions. QTAIM's source function analysis has suggested that the fully negatively charged fluorine atoms in C6F6 serve as sinks for the F(δ-)···F(δ-) bond formation.
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A unified relationship between the experimental formation constants and the ligand(s)-to-metal charge transfer values of versatile ligand complexes of late transition series first-row bivalent metal ions is uncovered. The latter property not only explicates the Irving-Williams series but also rationalizes quantitatively Pearson's concept of hard and soft acids and bases by correlating the gas-phase to aqueous solution-phase chemistry in a broad sense.
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Noncovalent interactions in 18 weakly bound binary complexes formed between either of the two end-on orientations of the CO molecule and the methylated carbon positive σ-hole associated with the hydrophobic part of the CH3-X molecules are exploited using the density functional theory to examine the physical chemistry of the recently introduced 'carbon bonds' (Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2013, 15, 14377), where X = -NO2, -CN, -F, -Cl, -Br, -OH, -CF3, -CCl3, and -NH2. The two important types of interactions are identified as C···O and C···C, the latter has probably never studied before, and are found to be stabilized by charge-transfer delocalizations between the electron-acceptor and -donor natural bond orbitals of the interacting partners involved, unveiled using natural bond orbital analysis. Application of atoms in molecular theory revealed preferable quantum mechanical exchange-correlation energy channels and (3, -1) bond critical points (bcps) between the atoms of noncovalently bonded pairs in these complexes, in excellent agreement with the results of the noncovalent-interaction reduced-density-gradient (NCI-RDG) theory that revealed expected isosurfaces and troughs in the low density region of the RDG vs. sign(λ2)ρ plots. The dependencies of the C···O and C···C bcp charge densities on their corresponding local energy densities, as well as on their corresponding bond electron delocalization indices are found to exhibit nontrivial roles of these topological descriptors to explain the stabilities of the investigated binary complexes. Moreover, the vibrational red- and blue-shifts in the CO bond stretching frequencies, and concomitant elongations and contractions of the corresponding bond lengths, both with respect to the monomer values, are observed upon the formation of the C···O- and C···C-bonded complexes, respectively. The increase and decrease in the complex dipole moments, relative to the sum of their respective monomer values, are found to be a characteristic that separates the aforementioned red- and blue-shifted interactions. In analogy with dihydrogen bonding, as well as that with the charge and electrostatic surface potential model descriptions, we suggest the C···C interactions to be referred to as dicarbon bonds.