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Multinuclear Solid‐State Magnetic Resonance as a Sensitive Probe of Structural Changes upon the Occurrence of Halogen Bonding in Co‐crystals
Authors:Dr Cory M Widdifield  Prof Gabriella Cavallo  Dr Glenn A Facey  Dr Tullio Pilati  Jingxiang Lin  Prof Pierangelo Metrangolo  Prof Giuseppe Resnati  Prof David L Bryce
Institution:1. Department of Chemistry and Centre for Catalysis Research and Innovation, University of Ottawa, 10 Marie Curie Pvt. Ottawa, Ontario (Canada);2. Present Address: Centre de RMN à Très Hauts Champs, Université de Lyon (CNRS/ENS Lyon/UCB Lyon 1), 69100 Villeurbanne (France);3. NFMLab–D.C.M.I.C. “Giulio Natta”, Politechnico di Milano, Via L. Mancinelli 7, 20131 Milano (Italy)
Abstract:Although the understanding of intermolecular interactions, such as hydrogen bonding, is relatively well‐developed, many additional weak interactions work both in tandem and competitively to stabilize a given crystal structure. Due to a wide array of potential applications, a substantial effort has been invested in understanding the halogen bond. Here, we explore the utility of multinuclear (13C, 14/15N, 19F, and 127I) solid‐state magnetic resonance experiments in characterizing the electronic and structural changes which take place upon the formation of five halogen‐bonded co‐crystalline product materials. Single‐crystal X‐ray diffraction (XRD) structures of three novel co‐crystals which exhibit a 1:1 stoichiometry between decamethonium diiodide (i.e., (CH3)3N+(CH2)10N+(CH3)3]2 I?]) and different para‐dihalogen‐substituted benzene moieties (i.e., p‐C6X2Y4, X=Br, I; Y=H, F) are presented. 13C and 15N NMR experiments carried out on these and related systems validate sample purity, but also serve as indirect probes of the formation of a halogen bond in the co‐crystal complexes in the solid state. Long‐range changes in the electronic environment, which manifest through changes in the electric field gradient (EFG) tensor, are quantitatively measured using 14N NMR spectroscopy, with a systematic decrease in the 14N quadrupolar coupling constant (CQ) observed upon halogen bond formation. Attempts at 127I solid‐state NMR spectroscopy experiments are presented and variable‐temperature 19F NMR experiments are used to distinguish between dynamic and static disorder in selected product materials, which could not be conclusively established using solely XRD. Quantum chemical calculations using the gauge‐including projector augmented‐wave (GIPAW) or relativistic zeroth‐order regular approximation (ZORA) density functional theory (DFT) approaches complement the experimental NMR measurements and provide theoretical corroboration for the changes in NMR parameters observed upon the formation of a halogen bond.
Keywords:co‐crystallization  halogen bonds  noncovalent interactions  NMR spectroscopy  X‐ray diffraction
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