Abstract: | The propensity of C-F groups to form C-F H-C interactions with C-H groups on other molecules has been analyzed. Crystal structures of molecules containing only carbon, hydrogen, and fluorine, but no oxygen, nitrogen, or other hydrogen-bond-forming elements, were chosen for an initial study in which the intermolecular interactions in crystal-structure determinations of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and their analogous fluoro derivatives were analyzed. It is found that C-F H-C interactions occur, but they are weak, as judged by the intermolecular distances and the angles involved. In a study of crystal structures of molecules containing other elements in addition to carbon, hydrogen, and fluorine, it was found that when an oxygen atom is in a neighboring position on an interacting molecule, a C-O group is more likely than a C-F group to form a linear interaction to the hydrogen atom of a C-H group. Thus, in spite of the high electronegativity of the fluorine atom, a C-F group competes unfavorably with a C-O–, C-OH, or C=O group to form a hydrogen bond to an O-H, N-H, or C-H group. It is found, however, particularly for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons with substituted CF3 groups that, in the absence of other functional groups that can form stronger interactions, C-F H-C interactions may serve to align molecules and give a different crystal packing from that in the pure hydrocarbon (where fluorine is replaced by hydrogen). Thus, C-F H-X (X = C, N, O) interactions are very weak, much weaker than C=O H-X interactions, but they cannot be ignored in predictions of modes of molecular packing in complexes and in crystals. |