Molecular mechanical perspective on halogen bonding.

J Mol Model

School of Chemistry, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester M139PL, UK.

Published: October 2012

The nature and strength of halogen bonding in halo molecule-Lewis base complexes were studied in terms of molecular mechanics using our recently developed positive extra-point (PEP) approach, in which the σ-hole on the halogen atom is represented by an extra point of positive charge. The contributions of the σ-hole (i.e., positively charged extra point) and the halogen atom to the strength of this noncovalent interaction were clarified using the atomic parameter contribution to the molecular interaction (APCtMI) approach. The molecular mechanical results revealed that the halogen bond is electrostatic and van der Waals in nature, and its strength depends on three types of interaction: (1) the attractive electrostatic interaction between the σ-hole and the Lewis base, (2) the repulsive electrostatic interaction between the negative halogen atom and the Lewis base, and (3) the repulsive/attractive van der Waals interactions between the halogen atom and the Lewis base. The strength of the halogen bond increases with increasing σ-hole size (i.e., magnitude of the extra-point charge) and increasing halogen atom size. The van der Waals interaction's contribution to the halogen bond strength is most favorable in chloro complexes, whereas the electrostatic interaction is dominant in iodo complexes. The idea that the chloromethane molecule can form a halogen bond with a Lewis base was revisited in terms of quantum mechanics and molecular mechanics. Although chloromethane does produce a positive region along the C-Cl axis, basis set superposition error corrected second-order Møller-Plesset calculations showed that chloromethane-Lewis base complexes are unstable, producing halogen-Lewis base contacts longer than the sum of the van der Waals radii of the halogen and O/N atoms. Molecular mechanics using the APCtMI approach showed that electrostatic interactions between chloromethane and a Lewis base are unfavorable owing to the high negative charge on the chlorine atom, which overcomes the corresponding favorable van der Waals interactions.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00894-012-1454-8DOI Listing

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