The inversion of tetrahedral p-block element compounds: general trends and the relation to the second-order Jahn–Teller effect |
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Authors: | Lukas M. Sigmund Rouven Maier Lutz Greb |
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Affiliation: | Anorganisch-Chemisches Institut, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Im Neuenheimer Feld 270, 69120 Heidelberg Germany.; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry – Inorganic Chemistry, Freie Universität Berlin, Fabeckstr. 34/36, 14195 Berlin Germany |
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Abstract: | The tetrahedron is the primary structural motif among the p-block elements and determines the architecture of our bio- and geosphere. However, a broad understanding of the configurational inversion of tetrahedral compounds is missing. Here, we report over 250 energies (DLPNO-CCSD(T)) for square planar inversion of third- and fourth-period element species of groups 13, 14, and 15. Surprisingly low inversion barriers are identified for compounds of industrial relevance (e.g., ≈100 kJ mol−1 for Al(OH)4−). More fundamentally, the second-order Jahn–Teller theorem is disclosed as suitable to rationalize substituent and central element effects. Bond analysis tools give further insights into the preference of eight valence electron systems with four substituents to be tetrahedral. Hence, this study develops a model to understand, memorize, and predict the angular flexibility of tetrahedral species. Perceiving the tetrahedron not as forcingly rigid but as a dynamic structural entity might leverage new approaches and visions for adaptive matter.The tetrahedron is the primary structural motif among the p-block elements and determines the architecture of our bio- and geosphere. This study sheds light on its stereochemical inversion process. |
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