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Unusually Large Effects of Charge-assisted C-H⋅⋅⋅F Hydrogen Bonds to Anionic Fluorine in Organic Solvents: Computational Study of 19 F NMR Shifts versus Thermochemistry.

Martin KauppCaspar J SchattenbergRobert MüllerMarc Reimann
Published in: ChemistryOpen (2022)
A comparison of computed 19 F NMR chemical shifts and experiment provides evidence for large specific solvent effects for fluoride-type anions interacting with the σ*(C-H) orbitals in organic solvents like MeCN or CH 2 Cl 2 . We show this for systems ranging from the fluoride ion and the bifluoride ion [FHF] - to polyhalogen anions [ClF x ] - . Discrepancies between computed and experimental shifts when using continuum solvent models like COSMO or force-field-based descriptions like the 3D-RISM-SCF model show specific orbital interactions that require a quantum-mechanical treatment of the solvent molecules. This is confirmed by orbital analyses of the shielding constants, while less negatively charged fluorine atoms (e. g., in [EF 4 ] - ) do not require such quantum-mechanical treatments to achieve reasonable accuracy. The larger 19 F solvent shift of fluoride in MeCN compared to water is due to the larger coordination number in the former. These observations are due to unusually strong charge-assisted C-H⋅⋅⋅F - hydrogen bonds, which manifest beyond some threshold negative natural charge on fluorine of ca. < -0.6 e. The interactions are accompanied by sizable free energies of solvation, in the order F - ≫[FHF] - >[ClF 2 ] - >[ClF 4 ] - . COSMO-RS solvation free energies tend to moderately underestimate those from the micro-solvated cluster treatment. Red-shifted and intense vibrational C-H stretching bands, potentially accessible in bulk solution, are further spectroscopic finger prints.
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