Literature DB >> 15672434

The nature of the chemical bond revisited: an energy-partitioning analysis of nonpolar bonds.

Attila Kovács1, Catharine Esterhuysen, Gernot Frenking.   

Abstract

The nature of the chemical bond in nonpolar molecules has been investigated by energy-partitioning analysis (EPA) of the ADF program using DFT calculations. The EPA divides the bonding interactions into three major components, that is, the repulsive Pauli term, quasiclassical electrostatic interactions, and orbital interactions. The electrostatic and orbital terms are used to define the nature of the chemical bond. It is shown that nonpolar bonds between main-group elements of the first and higher octal rows of the periodic system, which are prototypical covalent bonds, have large attractive contributions from classical electrostatic interactions, which may even be stronger than the attractive orbital interactions. Fragments of molecules with totally symmetrical electron-density distributions, like the nitrogen atoms in N(2), may strongly attract each other through classical electrostatic forces, which constitute 30.0 % of the total attractive interactions. The electrostatic attraction can be enhanced by anisotropic charge distribution of the valence electrons of the atoms that have local areas of (negative) charge concentration. It is shown that the use of atomic partial charges in the analysis of the nature of the interatomic interactions may be misleading because they do not reveal the topography of the electronic charge distribution. Besides dinitrogen, four groups of molecules have been studied. The attractive binding interactions in H(n)E-EH(n) (E=Li to F; n=0-3) have between 20.7 (E=F) and 58.4 % (E=Be) electrostatic character. The substitution of hydrogen by fluorine does not lead to significant changes in the nature of the binding interactions in F(n)E-EF(n) (E=Be to O). The electrostatic contributions to the attractive interactions in F(n)E-EF(n) are between 29.8 (E=O) and 55.3 % (E=Be). The fluorine substituents have a significant effect on the Pauli repulsion in the nitrogen and oxygen compounds. This explains why F(2)N-NF(2) has a much weaker bond than H(2)N-NH(2), whereas the interaction energy in FO-OF is much stronger than in HO-OH. The orbital interactions make larger contributions to the double bonds in HB=BH, H(2)C=CH(2), and HN=NH (between 59.9 % in B(2)H(2) and 65.4 % in N(2)H(2)) than to the corresponding single bonds in H(n)E-EH(n). The orbital term Delta E(orb) (72.4 %) makes an even greater contribution to the HC triple bond CH triple bond. The contribution of Delta E(orb) to the H(n)E=EH(n) bond increases and the relative contribution of the pi bonding decreases as E becomes more electronegative. The pi-bonding interactions in HC triple bond CH amount to 44.4 % of the total orbital interactions. The interaction energy in H(3)E-EH(3) (E=C to Pb) decreases monotonically as the element E becomes heavier. The electrostatic contributions to the E-E bond increases from E=C (41.4 %) to E=Sn (55.1 %) but then decreases when E=Pb (51.7 %). A true understanding of the strength and trends of the chemical bonds can only be achieved when the Pauli repulsion is considered. In an absolute sense the repulsive Delta E(Pauli) term is in most cases the largest term in the EPA.

Entities:  

Year:  2005        PMID: 15672434     DOI: 10.1002/chem.200400525

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chemistry        ISSN: 0947-6539            Impact factor:   5.236


  5 in total

Review 1.  Energy decomposition analysis based on a block-localized wavefunction and multistate density functional theory.

Authors:  Yirong Mo; Peng Bao; Jiali Gao
Journal:  Phys Chem Chem Phys       Date:  2011-03-02       Impact factor: 3.676

2.  Direct estimate of the internal π-donation to the carbene centre within N-heterocyclic carbenes and related molecules.

Authors:  Diego M Andrada; Nicole Holzmann; Thomas Hamadi; Gernot Frenking
Journal:  Beilstein J Org Chem       Date:  2015-12-24       Impact factor: 2.883

3.  The Bonding Situation in Metalated Ylides.

Authors:  Lennart T Scharf; Diego M Andrada; Gernot Frenking; Viktoria H Gessner
Journal:  Chemistry       Date:  2017-03-07       Impact factor: 5.236

4.  Distortion-Controlled Redshift of Organic Dye Molecules.

Authors:  Ayush K Narsaria; Jordi Poater; Célia Fonseca Guerra; Andreas W Ehlers; Trevor A Hamlin; Koop Lammertsma; F Matthias Bickelhaupt
Journal:  Chemistry       Date:  2020-01-30       Impact factor: 5.236

5.  The Valence Orbitals of the Alkaline-Earth Atoms.

Authors:  Israel Fernández; Nicole Holzmann; Gernot Frenking
Journal:  Chemistry       Date:  2020-09-29       Impact factor: 5.236

  5 in total

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