Login / Signup

Tetrel Bonding of the Carbenium Ion Forms a Pentacoordinate Carbon Atom.

Steve Scheiner
Published in: Chemphyschem : a European journal of chemical physics and physical chemistry (2024)
As a flat trigonal species, the CR 3 + carbenium ion contains a pair of deep π-holes above and below its molecular plane. In the case of CH 3 + a first base will form a covalent bond with the central C, making the combined species tetrahedral. Approach of a second base to the opposite side results in a longer but rather strong noncovalent tetrel bond (TB). While CMe 3 + can also form a similar asymmetric complex with a pair of bases, it also has the capacity to form a pair of nearly equivalent TBs, such that the resulting symmetric trigonal bipyramid configuration is only slightly higher in energy. When the three substituents on the central C are phenyl rings, the symmetric configuration with two TBs predominates. These tetrel bonds are quite strong, reaching up to 20 kcal/mol. Adding OPH 2 or OCH substituents to the phenyl rings permits the formation of intramolecular C⋅⋅O TBs to the central C, very similar in many respects to the case where these TBs are intermolecular.
Keyphrases
  • mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • energy transfer
  • room temperature
  • genetic diversity