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Changing aromatic properties through stacking: the face-to-face dimer of Ni(II) bis(pentafluorophenyl)norcorrole.

Qian WangDage SundholmJürgen GaussTommaso NottoliFilippo LippariniShota KinoShusaku UkaiNorihito FukuiHiroshi Shinokubo
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2024)
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) shielding constants have been calculated for Ni(II) bis(pentafluorophenyl)norcorrole and its face-to-face stacked dimer at the Hartree-Fock (HF), second-order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP2), complete-active-space self-consistent-field (CASSCF) levels as well as at density functional theory (DFT) levels using several functionals. The calculated 1 H NMR shielding constants agree rather well with the experimental ones. The shielding constants of N and Ni calculated at DFT, HF, and MP2 levels differ from those obtained in the CASSCF calculations due to near-degeneracy effects at the Ni atom. The calculated magnetically induced current densities show that the monomer is antiaromatic, sustaining a strong global paratropic ring current, and the dimer is aromatic, sustaining a strong diatropic ring current. Qualitatively the same current density is obtained at the employed levels of theory. The most accurate ring-current strengths are probably obtained at the MP2 level. The aromatic dimer has a short intermolecular distance of less than 3 Å. The intermolecular interaction changes the nature of the frontier orbitals leading to a formal double bond between the norcorrole macrocycles.
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