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Ab Initio Study of Chiral Discrimination in the Glycidol Dimer.

Reza HemmatiKonrad Patkowski
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. A (2020)
Chiral discrimination, the ability of a chiral molecule to exhibit different weak intermolecular interactions than its mirror image, is investigated for dimers of oxiranemethanol (glycidol). In this regard, high-level ab initio calculations were performed to study the chiral recognition effects in the homochiral and heterochiral dimers of glycidol. Fourteen dimer structures, seven homochiral and seven heterochiral, were studied: they all feature two intermolecular O-H···O hydrogen bonds. These structures have been determined with the second-order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP2) using the aug-cc-pVTZ basis set and verified to pertain to actual local minima. The benchmark interaction energy values were computed using MP2 extrapolated from the aug-cc-pVQZ and aug-cc-pV5Z bases with a higher-level correction from a coupled-cluster calculation in the aug-cc-pVTZ basis. The global minimum structure is a homochiral one, with the two hydrogen bonds forming a part of a ring with eight heavy atoms. A similar heterochiral structure has a binding energy smaller by about 0.6 kcal/mol. The largest diastereomeric energy difference is about 1.0 kcal/mol. Further insight into the origins of chiral discrimination was provided by symmetry-adapted perturbation theory (SAPT) and a functional-group SAPT (F-SAPT) difference analysis to investigate the direct and indirect effects of two -H/-CH2OH substitutions leading from an achiral ethylene oxide dimer to the chiral glycidol dimer. Last but not least, harmonic frequency shifts relative to a noninteracting glycidol molecule were calculated and analyzed for all conformations to get insight into the origins of chiral discrimination. It is found that the largest frequency shifts are related to the effect of hydrogen bonding on the O-H stretch mode, the stability of the ring involving both hydrogen bonds, and the transition between two nonequivalent minima of the glycidol molecule.
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