σ‐Hole intermolecular interactions between carbon oxides and dihalogens: Ab‐initio investigations

Author:

Rahali Emna1,Oussama Zouaghi Mohamed1,Sanz Javier Fernandez2,Raouafi Noureddine3,Arfaoui Youssef1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Characterizations, Applications and Modeling of Materials (LR18ES08), Department of Chemistry University of Tunis El Manar Tunis Tunisia

2. Departamento de Química Física, Facultad de Química Universidad de Sevilla Sevilla Spain

3. Sensors and Biosensors Group, Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry and Electrochemistry (LR99ES15), Department of Chemistry University of Tunis El Manar Tunis Tunisia

Abstract

AbstractRecently, halogen bonding (XB) has received increased attention as a new type of non‐covalent interaction widely present in nature. In this work, quantum chemical calculations at DFT level have been carried out to investigate halogen bonding interactions between COn(n = 1 or 2) and dihalogen molecules XY (X = F, Cl, Br, I and Y = Cl, Br, I). Highly accurate all‐electron data, estimated by CCSD(T) calculations, were used to benchmark the different levels of computational methods with the objective of finding the best accuracy/computational cost. Molecular electrostatic potential, interaction energy values, charge transfer, UV spectra, and natural bond orbital (NBO) analysis were determined to better understand the nature of the XB interaction. Density of states (DOS) and projected DOS were also computed. Hence, according to these results, the magnitude of the halogen bonding is affected by the halogen polarizability and electronegativity, where for the more polarizable and less electronegative halogen atoms, the σ‐hole is bigger. Furthermore, for the halogen‐bonded complexes involving CO and XY, the OC∙∙∙XY interaction is stronger than the CO∙∙∙XY interaction. Thus, the results presented here can establish fundamental characteristics of halogen bonding in media, which would be very helpful for applying this noncovalent interaction for the sustainable capture of carbon oxides.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Computational Mathematics,General Chemistry

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