Blue-shifted hydrogen-bonded complexes. II. CH3F(HF)1 n 3 and CH2F2(HF)1 n 3 |
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Authors: | Alfred Karpfen Eugene S. Kryachko |
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Affiliation: | aInstitute for Theoretical Chemistry and Structural Biology, University of Vienna, Währinger Straße 17, A-1090 Vienna, Austria;bDepartment of Chemistry, Bat. B6c, University of Liege, Sart-Tilman, B-4000 Liege 1, Belgium;cBogoliubov Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kiev, 03143 Ukraine |
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Abstract: | The equilibrium structures, binding energies, and vibrational spectra of the clusters CH3F(HF)1 n 3 and CH2F2(HF)1 n 3 have been investigated with the aid of large-scale ab initio calculations performed at the Møller–Plesset second-order level. In all complexes, a strong C–FH–F halogen–hydrogen bond is formed. For the cases n = 2 and n = 3, blue-shifting C–HF–H hydrogen bonds are formed additionally. Blue shifts are, however, encountered for all C–H stretching vibrations of the fluoromethanes in all complexes, whether they take part in a hydrogen bond or not, in particular also for n = 1. For the case n = 3, blue shifts of the ν(C–H) stretching vibrational modes larger than 50 cm−1 are predicted. As with the previously treated case of CHF3(HF)1 n 3 complexes (A. Karpfen, E. S. Kryachko, J. Phys. Chem. A 107 (2003) 9724), the typical blue-shifting properties are to a large degree determined by the presence of a strong C–FH–F halogen–hydrogen bond. Therefore, the term blue-shifted appears more appropriate for this class of complexes. Stretching the C–F bond of a fluoromethane by forming a halogen–hydrogen bond causes a shortening of all C–H bonds. The shortening of the C–H bonds is proportional to the stretching of the C–F bond. |
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