Posts Tagged ‘basic search’

Discovering chemical concepts from crystal structure statistics: The Jahn-Teller effect

Saturday, May 30th, 2015

I am on a mission to persuade my colleagues that the statistical analysis of crystal structures is a useful teaching tool.  One colleague asked for a demonstration and suggested exploring the classical Jahn-Teller effect (thanks Milo!). This is a geometrical distortion associated with certain molecular electronic configurations, of which the best example is illustrated by octahedral copper complexes which have a d9 electronic configuration. The eg level shown below is occupied by three electrons and which can therefore distort in one of two ways to eliminate the eg degeneracy by placing the odd electron into either a x2-y2 or a z2 orbital. Here I explore how this effect can be teased out of crystal structures.

JT

The search is set up with Cu specified as precisely 6-coordinate, and X=oxygen. The six X-Cu distances are defined as DIST1-DIST6. The R-factor is specified as < 0.05 (no disorder, no errors). The problem now is how to plot what is in effect a six-dimensional set of data, from which we are exploring whether four of the distances are different from the other two, and whether those four are the longer or the shorter. This requires analysis beyond the capability (as far as I know) of the Conquest program, and so here I will show sets of plots showing just the relationship between any two distances at a time. Of the 15 possible combinations of two distances, only four are shown below.

Some obvious patterns can already be spotted in the 400 or so compounds which satisfy the search criteria.

  • The largest clustering occurs at ~1.95Å, with two clusters each of fewer hits at ~2.5Å. The Wikipedia page notes that for Cu(OH2)6 the Jahn-Teller distortion favours four short bonds at ~1.95Å and two long ones at ~2.38Å, which agrees approximately with the positions and sizes of the centroids of these clusters.
  • Plots 1 and 2 show very little along the diagonals, where the two plotted distances have the same value. This probably means that one of the distances relates to an equatorial ligand and the other to an axial ligand.
  • Plots 3 and 4 show a strong diagonal trend, and so these distances both relate to either axial or equatorial, but not one of each.
  • All four plots show a hot spot at ~1.95Å, which hints that the Jahn-Teller distortion is four short bonds/two long.
  • Plot 4 also shows a green spot at ~2.5Å which is a tantalising suggestion of examples of four long bonds/two short.
  1. CuO-12
  2. CuO-34
  3. CuO-56
  4. CuO-13

Clearly this analysis can be followed up by a visual inspection of individual molecules in each cluster (as well as the outliers which appear to follow no pattern!), together with a more bespoke analysis of the six distances. Unfortunately, the spin state of the complexes cannot be quickly checked (are they all doublets?) since the database does not record these.  But the basic search described above takes only a few minutes to do, and it is surprising at how quickly the Jahn-Teller effect can be statistically tested with real experimental data obtained for ~400 molecules. Of course, here I have only explored X=O but this can easily be extended to X=N or X=Cl, to other metals or to alternative coordination numbers such as e.g. 4 where the Jahn-Teller effect can also in principle operate.


One genuine example of this type, also called compressed octahedral coordination, was reported for the species CuFAsF6 and CsCuAlF6[1]


The measured geometry of Cu(H2O)6 may in fact manifest with six equal Cu-O bond lengths due to the dynamic Jahn-Teller effect, because the kinetic barrier separating one Jahn-Teller distorted form and another (equivalent) isomer is small and hence averaged atom positions are measured which mask the effect. Thus the Jahn-Teller effects shown in the plots above may be under-estimated because of this dynamic masking. Reducing the temperature of the sample at which data was collected would reduce this dynamic effect. Indeed, Cu(D2O)6 collected at 93K shows a very clear Jahn-Teller distortion[2] with four long bonds ranging from 1.97-1.99Å and two long bonds 2.37-2.39Å.[3] Another example measured at 89K with dimethyl formamide replacing water and coordinated via oxygen[4] shows four short (1.97-1.98Å) and two long (2.315Å) bonds. This latter example is also noteworthy because this analysis is as yet unpublished in a journal, but the data itself has a DOI via which it can be acquired. A nice example of modern research data management!


References

  1. Z. Mazej, I. Arčon, P. Benkič, A. Kodre, and A. Tressaud, "Compressed Octahedral Coordination in Chain Compounds Containing Divalent Copper: Structure and Magnetic Properties of CuFAsF<sub>6</sub> and CsCuAlF<sub>6</sub>", Chemistry – A European Journal, vol. 10, pp. 5052-5058, 2004. https://doi.org/10.1002/chem.200400397
  2. W. Zhang, L. Chen, R. Xiong, T. Nakamura, and S.D. Huang, "New Ferroelectrics Based on Divalent Metal Ion Alum", Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 131, pp. 12544-12545, 2009. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja905399x
  3. Zhang, Wen., Chen, Li-Zhuang., Xiong, Ren-Gen., Nakamura, T.., and Huang, S.D.., "CCDC 755150: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination", 2010. https://doi.org/10.5517/cctbspl
  4. M.M. Olmstead, D.S. Marlin, and P.K. Mascharak, "CCDC 1053817: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination", 2015. https://doi.org/10.5517/cc14cl36

The gauche effect: seeking evidence by a survey of crystal structures.

Friday, January 4th, 2013

I previously blogged about anomeric effects involving π electrons as donors, and my post on the conformation of 1,2-difluorethane turned out one of the most popular. Here I thought I would present the results of searching the Cambridge crystal database for examples of the gauche effect. The basic search is defined belowCCDC-search

Here, we define a four-atom torsion (TOR1), the two central carbon atoms having two groups R which can be only H or C. These two carbons are also defined as acyclic. The restrictions of the search as defined above also include R-factor < 0.05, not disordered and no errors. These combine to reduce the number of hits significantly (although not dissimilar distributions are obtained for less restricted searches). Each search takes only a few seconds, and one can rattle through many permutations very quickly.

So here come the results. First, QA=4M=F. All but one of the examples has a torsion in the region of 60°, the classic gauche effect!

F-C-C-F

F-C-C-F

Next, QA=O, 4M=F. Rather more hits, and the effect is almost as clear-cut. I should point out that the apparent “exceptions” to the gauche conformation may arise from structural restrictions, and each really would have to be inspected individually for the reasons (which I do not attempt here). 

OCCF

OCCF

With QA=4M=O,  one has many more instances. The effect is pretty convincing (it may be that hydrogen bonding may also control the conformation).

O-C-C-O

O-C-C-O

Now for QA=4M=Cl. The distribution is slanted more to the anti conformation, but there are still quite a few gauche.

Cl-CC-Cl

Cl-CC-Cl

With QA=4M=S, the conformations are now almost all anti; the gauche effect is no more! 

S-C-C-S

S-C-C-S

And for QA=4M=Br, it has also almost vanished (there is only one instance for I, and that too is antiperiplanar).

Br-C-C-Br

Br-C-C-Br

I now return to an earlier post in which I speculated that a cyano group might participate in the anomeric effect. Well here it is in the gauche effect; QA=CN, 4M = any of N,O,F,Cl,S. Quite a few gauche orientations for this pseudo-halogen!

Neg-C-C-CN

Neg-C-C-CN

Another group that can act as a powerful acceptor of electrons from a donor is QA=N(Me)3+.. With 4M= N, O, F, Cl, here  the population of gauche conformers is large. QA=CF3 is a similar group.

Neg-C-C-NMe3

Neg-C-C-NMe3

 

Neg-C-C-CF3

Neg-C-C-CF3

 

One can envisage other combinations. Thus QA= C=C, 4M = any of  N, O, F, Cl. An alkene seems one of the more powerful gauche effect participants!

alkene-C-C-Neg

alkene-C-C-Neg

And alkynes, perhaps slightly less so.

Alkyne-C-C-Neg

Alkyne-C-C-Neg

What about metals (QA = any metal, 4M = any of N, O, F, Cl, S). Well, not particularly biased either way, but clearly one in which the identity of the metal may matter.

Metal-C-C-electronegative

Metal-C-C-electronegative

I should end with inverting the model. If QA is electropositive (any group to the left of carbon, or below it in the periodic table) and 4M is electronegative, than they align almost exclusively anti-periplanar and not gauche. But notice how relatively few examples there are.  Synthetic chemists, please make more such molecules!

Electropositive-C-C-Electronegative

Electropositive-C-C-Electronegative

If you thought the gauche effect was restricted to just a few molecules, think again!