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Get Free AccessHalogen bonding, due to its directionality and tunable strength, is being increasingly utilized in self-assembling materials and crystal engineering. Using density functional theory (DFT) and molecular mechanics (OPLS/CM1Ax) calculations, multiply halogen bonded complexes of brominated imidazole and pyridine are investigated along with their potential in construction of self-assembling architectures. Dimers with 1-10 halogen bonds are considered and reveal maximal binding energies of 3-36 kcal/mol. Cooperative (nonadditive) effects are found in complexes that extend both along and perpendicular to the halogen bonding axes, with interaction energies depending on polarization, secondary interactions, and ring spacers. Four structural motifs were identified to yield optimal halogen bonding. For the largest systems, the excellent agreement found between the DFT and OPLS/CM1Ax results supports the utility of the latter approach for analysis and design of self-assembling supramolecular structures.
Xin Yan, Patric Schyman, William L. Jorgensen (2014). Cooperative Effects and Optimal Halogen Bonding Motifs for Self-Assembling Systems. The Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 118(15), pp. 2820-2826, DOI: 10.1021/jp501553j.
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Type
Article
Year
2014
Authors
3
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
The Journal of Physical Chemistry A
DOI
10.1021/jp501553j
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