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Carbon-Carbon Bonding between Nitrogen Heterocyclic Carbenes and CO2.

Janet E Del BeneIbon AlkortaJose Elguero
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. A (2017)
Ab initio MP2/aug'-cc-pVTZ calculations were performed to identify equilibrium complexes and molecules and the transition structures that interconvert them, on the potential energy surfaces of a series of seven binary systems that have nitrogen heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) as the electron-pair donors to CO2. Seven of the NHCs form complexes stabilized by C···C tetrel bonds, and six of these seven are also stabilized by a secondary interaction between an O of CO2 and the adjacent N-H group of the carbene. Six of the seven NHCs also form stable molecules with C-C covalent bonds, and with one exception, these molecules have binding energies that are significantly greater than the binding energies of the complexes. Charge-transfer stabilizes all of the NHC:CO2 complexes and occurs from the C lone pair of the carbene to the CO2 molecule. The six complexes that have secondary stabilizing interactions are also stabilized by back-donation of charge from the O to the adjacent N-H group of the carbene. Transition structures present barriers to the interconversion of complexes and molecules. With one exception, the barrier for converting a molecule to a complex is much greater than the barrier for the reverse reaction. Atoms in Molecules bonding parameters, shifts of IR C-O stretching and O-C-O bending frequencies, changes in NMR 13C chemical shieldings, and changes in C-C and C-O coupling constants as 1tJ(C-C) and J(C-O) for complexes and transition structures become 1J(C-C) and 2J(C-O) for molecules, are all consistent with the changing nature of the C···C tetrel bond in the complex through the transition state to a covalent C-C bond in the molecule.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • density functional theory
  • magnetic resonance
  • molecular dynamics
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • escherichia coli
  • risk assessment
  • dna binding
  • climate change
  • electron transfer