Fluorobenzenes are pi-acceptor synthons that form pi-stacked structures in molecular crystals as well as in artificial DNAs. We investigate the competition between hydrogen bonding and pi-stacking in dimers consisting of the nucleobase mimic 2-pyridone (2PY) and all fluorobenzenes from 1-fluorobenzene to hexafluorobenzene (n-FB, with n = 1-6). We contrast the results of high level ab initio calculations with those obtained using ultraviolet (UV) and infrared (IR) laser spectroscopy of isolated and supersonically cooled dimers. The 2PY.n-FB complexes with n = 1-5 prefer double hydrogen bonding over pi-stacking, as diagnosed from the UV absorption and IR laser depletion spectra, which both show features characteristic of doubly H-bonded complexes. The 2-pyridone.hexafluorobenzene dimer is the only pi-stacked dimer, exhibiting a homogeneously broadened UV spectrum and no IR bands characteristic for H-bonded species. MP2 (second-order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory) calculations overestimate the pi-stacked dimer binding energies by about 10 kJ/mol and disagree with the experimental observations. In contrast, the MP2 treatment of the H-bonded dimers appears to be quite accurate. Grimme's spin-component-scaled MP2 approach (SCS-MP2) is an improvement over MP2 for the pi-stacked dimers, reducing the binding energy by approximately 10 kJ/mol. When applied to explicitly correlated MP2 theory (SCS-MP2-R12 approach), agreement with the corresponding coupled-cluster binding energies [at the CCSD(T) level] is very good for the pi-stacked dimers, within +/- 1 kJ/mol for the 2PY complexes with 1-fluorobenzene, 1,2-difluorobenzene, 1,2,4,5-tetrafluorobenzene, pentafluorobenzene and hexafluorobenzene. Unfortunately, the SCS-MP2 approach also reduces the binding energy of the H-bonded species, leading to disagreement with both coupled-cluster theory and experiment. The SCS-MP2-R12 binding energies follow the SCS-MP2 binding energies closely, being about 0.5 and 0.7 kJ/mol larger for the H-bonded and pi-stacked forms, respectively, in an augmented correlation-consistent polarized valence quadruple-zeta basis. It seems that the SCS-MP2 and SCS-MP2-R12 methods cannot provide sufficient accuracy to replace the CCSD(T) method for intermolecular interactions where H-bonding and pi-stacking are competitive.
Among the weak intermolecular interactions found in proteins, the amide N--H...pi interaction has been widely observed but remains poorly characterized as an individual interaction. We have investigated the isolated supersonic-jet-cooled dimer of the cis-amide and nucleobase analogue 2-pyridone (2PY) with benzene and benzene-d6. Both MP2 and SCS-MP2 geometry optimizations yield a T-shaped structure with a N--H...pi hydrogen bond to the benzene ring and the C=O group above, but far from the C--H bonds of benzene. The CCSD(T) calculated binding energy at the optimum geometry is De = 25.2 kJ/mol (dissociation energy D0 = 21.6 kJ/mol), corresponding to the H-bond strength of the water dimer or of N--H...O hydrogen bonds. The T-shaped geometry is supported by the infrared-ultraviolet depletion spectra of 2PY x benzene: The N--H stretch vibrational frequency is lowered by 56 cm(-1), and the C=O stretch vibration is lowered by 10 cm(-1), relative to those of bare 2PY, indicating a strong N--H...pi interaction and a weak interaction of the C=O group. The benzene C--H infrared stretches exhibit very small shifts (approximately 2 cm(-1)) relative to benzene, signaling the absence of interactions with the benzene C--H groups. The infrared spectral shifts are consistent with a strong nonconventional pi hydrogen bond and a T-shaped structure for 2PY x benzene. Symmetry-adapted perturbation theory calculations show that the N--H...pi interaction is by far the dominant stabilization factor.
The S(1)<-->S(0) vibronic spectra of supersonic jet-cooled 2-pyridone [pyridin-2-one (2PY)] and its N-H deuterated isotopomer (d-2PY) have been recorded by two-color resonant two-photon ionization, laser-induced fluorescence and emission, and fluorescence depletion spectroscopies. By combining these methods, the B origin of 2PY at 0(0) (0)+98 cm(-1) and the bands at +218 and +252 cm(-1) are identified as overtones of the S(1) state out-of-plane vibrations nu(1) (') and nu(2) ('), as are the analogous bands of d-2PY. Anharmonic double-minimum potentials are derived for the respective out-of-plane coordinates that predict further nu(1) (') and nu(2) (') overtones and combinations, reproducing approximately 80% of the vibronic bands up to 600 cm(-1) above the 0(0) (0) band. The fluorescence spectra excited at the electronic origins and the nu(1) (') and nu(2) (') out-of-plane overtone levels confirm these assignments. The S(1) nonplanar minima and S(1)<--S(0) out-of-plane progressions are in agreement with the determination of nonplanar vibrationally averaged geometries for the 0(0) (0) and 0(0) (0)+98 cm(-1) upper states by Held et al. [J. Chem. Phys. 95, 8732 (1991)]. The fluorescence lifetimes of the S(1) state vibrations show strong mode dependence: Those of the out-of-plane levels decrease rapidly above 200 cm(-1) excess vibrational energy, while the in-plane vibrations nu(5) ('), nu(8) ('), and nu(9) (') have longer lifetimes, although they are above or interspersed with the "dark" out-of-plane states. This is interpreted in terms of an S(1) (') state reaction with a low barrier towards a conical intersection with a prefulvenic geometry. Out-of-plane vibrational states can directly surmount this barrier, whereas in-plane vibrations are much less efficient in this respect. Analysis of the fluorescence spectra allows to identify nine in-plane S(0) (') state fundamentals, overtones of the S(0) state nu(1) (") and nu(2) (") out-of-plane vibrations, and >30 other overtones and combination bands. The B3LYP6-311++G(d,p) calculated anharmonic wave numbers are in very good agreement with the observed fundamentals, overtones, and combinations, with a deviation Delta(rms)=1.3%.
The hydrogen-bonded complexes of the nucleobase mimic 2-pyridone (2PY) with seven different fluorinated benzenes (1-, 1,2-, 1,4-, 1,2,3-, 1,3,5-, 1,2,3,4-, and 1,2,4,5-fluorobenzene) are important model systems for investigating the relative importance of hydrogen bonding versus pi-stacking interactions in DNA. We have shown by supersonic-jet spectroscopy that these dimers are hydrogen bonded and not pi-stacked at low temperature (Leist, R.; Frey, J. A.; Leutwyler, S. J. Phys. Chem. A 2006, 110, 4180). Their geometries and binding energies D(e) were calculated using the resolution of identity (RI) Møller-Plesset second-order perturbation theory method (RIMP2). The most stable dimers are bound by antiparallel N-H...F-C and C-H...O=C hydrogen bonds. The binding energies are extrapolated to the complete basis set (CBS) limit, , using the aug-cc-pVXZ basis set series. The CBS binding energies range from -D(e,CBS) = 6.4-6.9 kcal/mol and the respective dissociation energies from -D(0,CBS) = 5.9-6.3 kcal/mol. In combination with experiment, the latter represent upper limits to the dissociation energies of the pi-stacked isomers (which are not observed experimentally). The individual C-H...O=C and N-H...F-C contributions to D(e) can be approximately separated. They are nearly equal for 2PY.fluorobenzene; each additional F atom strengthens the C-H...O=C hydrogen bond by approximately 0.5 kcal/mol and weakens the C-F...H-N hydrogen bond by approximately 0.3 kcal/mol. The single H-bond strengths and lengths correlate with the gas-phase acid-base properties of the C-H and C-F groups of the fluorobenzenes.
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