Posts Tagged ‘Halogen’

A wider look at chlorine trifluoride: crystal structures and data mining.

Friday, June 10th, 2016

A while ago, I explored how the 3-coordinate halogen compound ClF3 is conventionally analyzed using VSEPR (valence shell electron pair repulsion theory). Here I (belatedly) look at other such tri-coordinate halogen compounds using known structures gleaned from the crystal structure database (CSD).

The search query specifies 7A as the central atom, defined with just three bonded (non-metallic) atoms. Initially, if no constraint on any cyclicity in the three 7A-NM bonds is made (and with R < 0.1, no errors, no disorder), the following result emerges.

I have plotted the three angle variables using the X/Y axes above and used colour to indicate the third angle (red = ~180°, blue = ~90°). The clusters show that two of the angles are ~90° and only one is ~180°. There is also a set of blue points (~90°) which show a linear correlation and which can be shown to derive from cyclicity, as the plot below reveals when acyclicity is specified for all three NM-7A bonds.

In this distribution, the two clusters for ANG1 or ANG2 of ~180° are small and compact, but the cluster where both ANG1 and ANG2 are ~90° is much more diffuse. Not all of the points in this cluster show as red (ANG3 ~180°); there are a few cyan or blue examples here too; indicating all three angles are in the range 140-90°. This result is not arising from cyclic constraints. 

This wider look at 3-coordinate compounds in group 17 (the halogens) quickly reveals a class of such molecules where all three angles are relatively small. This suggests that a closer look at the bonding in these systems, especially in terms of VSEPR, might be rewarding!

I end with an equivalent search for group 18 (the noble gases). Although the number of examples is small, all show the two small/one large angle so characteristic of chlorine trifluoride itself. 

The above is I think a good example of (big?) data mining, where one is searching for patterns, and if lucky spotting patterns that deviate from the norm to investigate the possibility of new chemical phenomena.[1] It is also interesting to speculate upon the origins of why two of the clusters shown above are small and compact and the third is much more diffuse.

References

  1. H.S. Rzepa, "Discovering More Chemical Concepts from 3D Chemical Information Searches of Crystal Structure Databases", Journal of Chemical Education, vol. 93, pp. 550-554, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jchemed.5b00346

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