Literature DB >> 19378976

Nature of PO bonds in phosphates.

Benjamin Gamoke1, Diane Neff, Jack Simons.   

Abstract

Making use of a combination of ab initio calculated geometries, orbital energies, and orbital spatial distributions as well as experimental information about bond lengths, bond energies, vibrational frequencies, and dipole moments, the nature of the terminal PO bond in phosphates such as (MeO)(3)PO was probed and compared to the case in MeO-P=O where P is trivalent and a PO pi bond is thus assumed to exist. We find that the MeO-P and terminal PO bond lengths in (MeO)(3)PO are essentially the same as in MeO-P=O and the terminal PO lengths are substantially shorter than single P-OMe bond lengths. We also find that the HOMO orbital energies in the two compounds are within 0.1 eV of one another and that these orbitals have spatial characteristics much like one would expect of a bonding pi orbital connecting two atoms from different rows of the periodic table. Using this data, making a comparison to the more familiar bonding arising in N(2), CO, and BF, and taking note of the dipole moments in compounds known to possess dative bonds, we conclude that it is best to represent the terminal PO bond in phosphates in terms of valence-bond structures such as (MeO)(3)P=O in which the formal charges are P(0)O(0) and where a single PO pi bond exists. However, when it comes to characterizing the PO antibonding pi* orbitals, significant differences arise. Electronic structure methods were able to identify the pi* orbital of MeO-P=O and to determine its energy (the MeO-P=O(-) anion is even bound). Similar attempts to identify the PO pi* orbital in the unbound (MeO)(3)P=O(-) anion lead us to conclude that this anion state is probably so strongly coupled to the continuum (i.e., to states corresponding to (MeO)(3)P=O plus a free electron) that it is so short lived as to be undetectable in experiments.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 19378976     DOI: 10.1021/jp810014s

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem A        ISSN: 1089-5639            Impact factor:   2.781


  4 in total

1.  Inorganic Polyphosphates As Storage for and Generator of Metabolic Energy in the Extracellular Matrix.

Authors:  Werner E G Müller; Heinz C Schröder; Xiaohong Wang
Journal:  Chem Rev       Date:  2019-11-18       Impact factor: 60.622

2.  Visualizing the Entire Range of Noncovalent Interactions in Nanocrystalline Hybrid Materials Using 3D Electron Diffraction.

Authors:  Yi Luo; Max T B Clabbers; Jian Qiao; Zhiqing Yuan; Weimin Yang; Xiaodong Zou
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2022-06-09       Impact factor: 16.383

3.  From a Dense Structure to Open Frameworks: The Structural Plethora of Alkali Metal Iron Fluorophosphates.

Authors:  Stefanie Siebeneichler; Katharina V Dorn; Volodymyr Smetana; Alexander Ovchinnikov; Anja-Verena Mudring
Journal:  Inorg Chem       Date:  2022-06-14       Impact factor: 5.436

Review 4.  An unexpected biomaterial against SARS-CoV-2: Bio-polyphosphate blocks binding of the viral spike to the cell receptor.

Authors:  Werner E G Müller; Heinz C Schröder; Meik Neufurth; Xiaohong Wang
Journal:  Mater Today (Kidlington)       Date:  2021-08-02       Impact factor: 31.041

  4 in total

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