The results obtained in a comprehensive experimental study on the redetermination of the structure of N(4)P(4)F(8) with single-crystal X-ray diffraction, gas electron diffraction (GED), and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) establish clearly that, in contrast to the previous report, the eight-membered heterocycle is not planar. Above the phase transition temperature of -74 degrees C, the ring appears pseudoplanar. However, the N(4)P(4) ring is disordered and is puckered above the phase transition when the disorder is modeled correctly. Below the phase transition the ring clearly resembles that of the saddle (K form) of N(4)P(4)Cl(8). The unit cell of the low-temperature phase is derived from that of the higher temperature phase by doubling the c-axis and removing one-half of the symmetry elements. Full structure optimizations were performed at the HF/6-31G and B3LYP/6-31G levels and fully support the experimental diffraction data.
The vibrational spectra, IR (gas) and Raman (liquid) of N-cyanoimidosulfurous difluoride, NCN=SF2, were recorded, and the molecular structure was determined by gas electron diffraction. The spectra were assigned by comparing the vibrational frequencies with those in related molecules and with calculated (HF, MP2, B3LYP with 6-31G(d) basis sets) values, and a normal coordinate analysis was performed. The molecule possesses a syn conformation (Ctriple bondN syn with respect to the bisector of the SF2 angle). This has been rationalized by orbital interactions of the electron lone pairs of sulfur and nitrogen with the N-C and S-F bonds, respectively, which are antiperiplanar or anticlinal to these lone pairs (anomeric effects). Quantum chemical calculations with the B3LYP and MP2 methods reproduce the experimental structure reasonably well if large basis sets (6-311G(2d,f)) are used.
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