Literature DB >> 20046948

Origin of Substituent Effects in Edge-to-Face Aryl-Aryl Interactions.

Steven E Wheeler1, K N Houk.   

Abstract

Substituent effects in the edge-to-face configuration of the benzene dimer have been studied using modern density functional theory. An accurate interaction potential energy curve has been computed for the unsubstituted dimer using ab initio methods with large basis sets. The recommended binding energy for the edge-to-face benzene dimer is 2.31 kcal mol(-1), estimated at the counterpoise-corrected CCSD(T)/aug-cc-pVTZ level of theory. For both edge-ring and face-ring-substituted dimers, interaction energies correlate with sigma(m) for the substituents, indicating that substituent effects can be understood qualitatively in terms of simple electrostatic effects, although in the latter case dispersion results in some scatter in the data. In contrast to prevailing models of substituent effects in benzene dimers, polarization of the pi-system of the substituted ring does not induce substituent effects. For edge-ring-substituted dimers, substituent effects arise from differential electrostatic interactions between the hydrogens on the substituted ring and the pi-cloud of the face ring and direct interactions of the substituents with the unsubstituted ring. For face-ring-substituted dimers, substituent effects arise from direct electrostatic and dispersion interactions of the substituents with the edge ring. Substituents with sigma(m) > 0.12 favor edge ring substitution while for sigma(m) < 0.12 substitution on the face ring is preferred.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 20046948      PMCID: PMC2742475          DOI: 10.1080/00268970802537614

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Phys        ISSN: 0026-8976            Impact factor:   1.962


  32 in total

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  15 in total

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8.  Substituent effects in cation/pi interactions and electrostatic potentials above the centers of substituted benzenes are due primarily to through-space effects of the substituents.

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9.  Through-Space Effects of Substituents Dominate Molecular Electrostatic Potentials of Substituted Arenes.

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