The surface properties of entirely hydroxylated, as well as significantly dehydroxylated, silica gel were investigated by means of the gas phase titration method. n-Tridecane was applied as blocking agent, while n-octane, benzene, and chloroform were the testing probes. The results obtained were com
Characterization of two types of intermolecular interactions on halogen monoxide monohydrates
✍ Scribed by Oscar Gálvez; Pedro C. Gómez; Luis F. Pacios
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 574 KB
- Volume
- 30
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0192-8651
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Monohydrates of halogen monoxides ClO·H~2~O and BrO·H~2~O have been studied by means of DFT (B3LYP) and ab initio (MP2) correlated calculations with aug‐cc‐pVnZ basis sets ranging from triple‐ up to quintuple‐ζ. These complexes might be formed in the troposphere and stratosphere and participate in chemical reactions involved in ozone depletion. Two stable structures are found that differ in the intermolecular interaction which takes place, namely: conventional XO…HOH hydrogen bond and OX…OH~2~ halogen bond. We demonstrate that both types of interactions participate in the formation of these complexes yet all the computational methods tested predict a slightly greater stability for the latter OX…O link. Both intermolecular interactions are characterized upon analyzing electron density distribution, charge transfer effects, and electron localization domains. These analyses reveal the central role played by electron redistribution. Because of this, the greater spatial extent of the electron density in Cl or Br as compared to H could be the main cause to yield a slightly greater stability for the OX…O halogen bond with respect to the O…HO hydrogen bond. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem, 2009
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract FTIR microspectrometry with in situ temperature variation and IR‐peak‐mapping capability, and POM characterization were used to study the crystal distribution in dual spherulites in poly(heptamethylene terephthalate). By tracing the crystalline IR bands of the α‐crystal and β‐crystal to
in previous papers, we presented an evaluation of the dispersion energy, using a double perturbation scheme and an "Epstein-Nesbet partition" of the individual molecular harn~ton~n~ The purpose of the present work is to check whether such dispersion energies, added to the SCF supermolecuie energies,