Posts Tagged ‘Matter’

Molecules of the year? Pnictogen chains and 16 coordinate Cs.

Monday, December 19th, 2016

I am completing my survey of the vote for molecule of the year candidates, which this year seems focused on chemical records of one type or another.

The first article[1] reports striving towards creating a molecule covering a complete column of the period table. In this case, group 7, containing N, P, As, Sb, Bi and Mc. Only the first four of these were incorporated, although the prospects of extending this to five seem good (and to six extremely unlikely).  The structure of this pnictogen chain is referenced here: DOI: 10.5517/CCDC.CSD.CC1LHPJ9 and I have demurred from a calculation.

The second article[2] relates to what might be called hypercoordination, and the achievement of what is felt is a maximum value of 16 to a single metal. I thought I might approach this one by searching the Cambridge structure database (CSD) by specifying any metal with a coordination number 16 as the search query. However, I was foiled in this query because the search software (Conquest) allows a maximum value of only 15! So instead I list the total number of hits retrieved for coordination numbers of 10-15: 25224, 4753, 8856, 2492, 839, 348 respectively.  

These totals have to be taken with some caution; the coordination number of what may often be very weak interactions may be often determined by human chemical perception rather than hard and fast rules. Nevertheless, the assignment of 348 molecules to having a coordination number of 15 is still a remarkably high number. If I can persuade CCDC to allow searches with 16, who knows what other candidates might emerge to rival this one, DOI: CCDC.CSD.CC1KFCQ2

The final candidate[3] is the only one where no measured coordinates are reported, with the title “Preparation of an ion with the highest calculated proton affinity: ortho-diethynylbenzene dianion”. There high level theoretical and computational modelling is reported to which I cannot add anything useful.

The common theme emerging of my review is that most of the candidates have crystal structures to which I have been able to occasionally add some computed quantum mechanical properties to try to tease out some other aspects of their character. It is also nice to be able to cite a persistent identifier (DOI) that leads directly to the 3D coordinates for the structures. My first ever post to this blog in 2008 addressed one solution on how such immediacy might be achieved and it is nice to see this now as a mainstream aspect of chemical publishing.

References

  1. A. Hinz, A. Schulz, and A. Villinger, "Synthesis of a Molecule with Four Different Adjacent Pnictogens", Chemistry – A European Journal, vol. 22, pp. 12266-12269, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.201601916
  2. D. Pollak, R. Goddard, and K. Pörschke, "Cs[H<sub>2</sub>NB<sub>2</sub>(C<sub>6</sub>F<sub>5</sub>)<sub>6</sub>] Featuring an Unequivocal 16-Coordinate Cation", Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 138, pp. 9444-9451, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.6b02590
  3. B.L.J. Poad, N.D. Reed, C.S. Hansen, A.J. Trevitt, S.J. Blanksby, E.G. Mackay, M.S. Sherburn, B. Chan, and L. Radom, "Preparation of an ion with the highest calculated proton affinity: ortho-diethynylbenzene dianion", Chemical Science, vol. 7, pp. 6245-6250, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6sc01726f

Allotropic halogens.

Sunday, April 26th, 2015

Allotropes are differing structural forms of the elements. The best known example is that of carbon, which comes as diamond and graphite, along with the relatively recently discovered fullerenes and now graphenes. Here I ponder whether any of the halogens can have allotropes.

Firstly, I am not aware of much discussion on the topic. But ClF3 is certainly well-known, and so it is trivial to suggest BrBr3, i.e. Br4 as an example of a halogen allotrope. Scifinder for example gives no literature hits on such a substance (either real or as a calculation; it is not always easy nowadays to tell which). So, is it stable? A B3LYP+D3/6-311++G(2d,2p) calculation reveals a free energy barrier of 17.2 kcal/mol preventing Br4 from dissociating to 2Br2.[1] The reaction however is rather exoenergic, and so to stand any chance of observing Br4, one would probably have to create it at a low temperature. But say -78° would probably be low enough to give it a long lifetime; perhaps even 0°.

Br4c
Br4

So how to make it? This is pure speculation, but the red colour of bromine originates from (weak, symmetry forbidden) transitions, with energies calculated (for the 2Br2 complex) as 504, 492nm. Geometry optimisation of the first singlet excited state of 2Br2 produces the structure below, not that different from Br4.
2Br2-excited

 

At least from these relatively simple calculations, it does seem as if an allotrope of bromine might be detectable spectroscopically, if not actually isolated as a pure substance.

References

  1. H.S. Rzepa, "Br4", 2015. https://doi.org/10.14469/ch/191228