| Literature DB >> 32538087 |
Ibon Alkorta1, José Elguero1, Janet E Del Bene2, Otilia Mó3, M Merced Montero-Campillo3, Manuel Yáñez3.
Abstract
Pnicogen bonds, which are weak noncovalent interactions (NCIs), can be significantly modified by the presence of beryllium bonds, one of the strongest NCIs known. We demonstrate the importance of this influence by studying ternary complexes in which both NCIs are present, that is, the ternary complexes formed by a nitrogen base (NH3, NHCH2, and NCH), a phosphine (fluorophosphane, PH2F) and a beryllium derivative (BeH2, BeF2, BeCl2, BeCO3, and BeSO4). Energies, structures, and nature of the chemical bonding in these complexes are studied by means of ab initio computational methods. The pnicogen bond between the nitrogen base and the phosphine and the beryllium bond between the fluorine atom of fluorophosphane and the beryllium derivative show large cooperativity effects both on energies and geometries, with dissociation energies up to 296 kJ mol-1 and cooperativity up to 104 kJ mol-1 in the most strongly bound complex, CH2HN:PH2F:BeSO4. In the complexes between the strongest nitrogen bases and the strongest beryllium donors, phosphorus-shared and phosphorus-transfer bonds are found.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32538087 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.0c03689
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phys Chem A ISSN: 1089-5639 Impact factor: 2.781