Recently, noncovalent interactions in complexes and crystals have attracted considerable interest. The current study was thus designed to gain a better understanding of three seminal types of noncovalent interactions, namely: hydrogen, halogen and tetrel interactions with p-systems. This study was performed on three models of Lewis acids: X 3 -C-H, F 3 -C-X and F-T-F 3 (where X ¼ F, Cl, Br and I; andT ¼ C, Si, Ge and Sn) and three p-systems as Lewis bases: benzene (BZN), 1,3,5-trifluorobenzene (TFB) and hexafluorobenzene (HFB). Quantum mechanical calculations, including geometrical optimization, molecular electrostatic potential (MEP), maximum positive electrostatic potential (V s,max ), Point-of-Charge (PoC), potential energy surface (PES), quantum theory of atoms in molecules (QTAIM) and noncovalent interaction (NCI) calculations, were carried out at the MP2/aug cc-pVDZ level of theory.The binding energies were additionally benchmarked at the CCSD(T)/CBS level. The results showed that:(i) the binding energies of the X 3 -C-H/p-system complexes were unexpectedly inversely correlated with the V s,max values on the hydrogen atom but directly correlated with the X atomic sizes; (ii) the binding energies for the F 3 -C-X/p-system and F-T-F 3 /p-system complexes were correlated with the s-hole magnitudes of the X and T atoms, respectively; and (iii) for the F 3 -C-F/p-system complexes, the binding energy was as strong as the p-system was electron-deficient, indicating the dominating nucleophilic character of the fluorine atom. NCI analysis showed that the unexpected trend of X 3 -C-H/p-system binding energies could be attributed to additional attractive interactions between the X atoms in the X 3 -C-H molecule and the carbon atoms of the p-system. Furthermore, the I 3 -Sn-H molecule was employed as a case study of hydrogen, halogen and tetrel interactions with p-systems. It was found that hydrogen and halogen interactions of the I 3 -Sn-H molecule correlated with the electron-richness of the p-system. In contrast, tetrel interactions correlated with the electron deficiency of the p-system.
In the spirit of the mounting interest in noncovalent interactions, the present study was conducted to scrutinize a special type that simultaneously involved both σ-hole and lone pair (lp) interactions with aromatic π-systems. Square-pyramidal pentavalent halogen-containing molecules, including X-Cl-F4, F-Y-F4, and F-I-X4 compounds (where X = F, Cl, Br, and I and Y = Cl, Br, and I) were employed as σ-hole/lp donors. On the other hand, benzene (BZN) and hexafluorobenzene (HFB) were chosen as electron-rich and electron-deficient aromatic π-systems, respectively. The investigation relied upon a variety of quantum chemical calculations that complement each other. The results showed that (i) the binding energy of the X-Y-F4···BZN complexes increased (i.e., more negative) as the Y atom had a larger magnitude of σ-hole, contrary to the pattern of X-Y-F4···HFB complexes; (ii) the interaction energies of X-Y-F4···BZN complexes were dominated by both dispersion and electrostatic contributions, while dispersive interactions dominated X-Y-F4···HFB complexes; and (iii) the X4 atoms in F-I-X4···π-system complexes governed the interaction energy pattern: the larger the X4 atoms were, the greater the interaction energies were, for the same π-system. The results had illuminating facets in regard to the rarely addressed cases of the σ-hole/lp contradictory scene.
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