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Abstract
A two-center three-electron 2c-3e bond (hemi-bond) is a non-classical chemical bond, and its existence has been supposed in radical cation clusters with lone pairs. Though the nature of the hemi-bond and its role in the reactivity of radical cations have attracted great interest, spectroscopic observations of hemi-bonded structures have been very scarce. In the present study, the presence of a stable hemi-bonded core (H2S∴SH2)+ in (H2S) n+ (n = 3-6) in the gas phase is demonstrated by infrared spectroscopy combined with quantum chemical calculations. The spectral features of the free SH stretch of the ion core show that the hemi-bond motif of the ion core is maintained up to the completion of the first H-bonded solvation shell. All of the observed spectra are well reproduced by the minimum energy hemi-bonded isomers, and no sign of the proton-transferred ion core type H3S+-SH, which is estimated to have a much higher energy, is found. Spin density calculations show that the excess charge is almost equally delocalized over the two H2S molecules in the cluster for n = 3 to 6. This also indicates the hemi-bond nature of the (H2S∴SH2)+ ion core and the small impact of the formation of a solvation shell on the ion core.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28553502 PMCID: PMC5433515 DOI: 10.1039/c6sc05361k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1Two possible structural motifs of (H2S)2 +.
Fig. 2Observed IR spectra of (H2S) + (n = 3–6). The bands are categorized into three types by colored dotted blocks (see text). The bump at ∼2400 cm–1, present throughout all cluster sizes, is caused by the depletion at 2360 cm–1 due to the strong IR absorption by atmospheric CO2.
Fig. 3Comparison between the observed spectra and harmonic spectra of the most stable isomers of (H2S) + (n = 3–6) in the free SH region. The simulation was performed at the UMP2/aug-cc-pVDZ level of theory with a scaling factor of 0.942.
Fig. 4The spin density for (H2S) + (n = 3–6) (isovalue = 0.006), and the natural population analysis (NPA) charge distribution for the molecular component.