Archive for the ‘Interesting chemistry’ Category

Short B-H…H-O Interactions in crystal structures – a short DFT Exploration using B3LYP+D4 and r2scan-3c

Monday, October 27th, 2025

In the previous post,[1] I was commenting that the transition state for borohydride reduction of a ketone contained some close contacts between the hydrogen of the borohydride and the hydrogen of water. A systematic search of the CSD reveals a modest number of such contacts have been observed in crystal structures (Table).  Since it is always good to have a reality check for constructed transition states, here I take a look at some of compounds showing the closest H…H contacts in the experimental database of structures.

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References

  1. H. Rzepa, "The mechanism of borohydride reductions. Part 2: 4-t-butyl-cyclohexanone – Dispersion induced stereochemistry.", 2025. https://doi.org/10.59350/x5k75-t2m40

Alternative reactions of the N≡N “triple bond” in a nitric oxide dimer: forming the trimer N3O3.

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2025

In the previous post[1] I mooted the possibility that a high energy form of the dimer of nitric oxide 1 might nonetheless be able to be detected using suitable traps (such as hydrogenation or cycloaddition). However, an interesting alternative is that this species could be trapped by nitric oxide itself. According to [2] in an article entitled “Decomposition of nitric oxide at elevated pressures” the rate of this termolecular reaction 3NO → N2O + NO2 are said to obey third order kinetics. One plausible mechanism for this process is shown below.

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References

  1. H. Rzepa, "Hydrogenating the even more mysterious N≡N triple bond in a nitric oxide dimer.", 2025. https://doi.org/10.59350/rzepa.29626
  2. T. Melia, "Decomposition of nitric oxide at elevated pressures", Journal of Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry, vol. 27, pp. 95-98, 1965. https://doi.org/10.1016/0022-1902(65)80196-8

Hydrogenating the even more mysterious N≡N triple bond in a nitric oxide dimer.

Monday, August 25th, 2025

Previously[1] I looked at some of the properties of the mysterious dimer of nitric oxide  1 – not the known weak dimer but a higher energy form with a “triple” N≡N bond. This valence bond isomer of the weak dimer was some 24 kcal/mol higher in free energy than the two nitric oxide molecules it would be formed from. An energy decomposition analysis (NEDA) of 1 revealed an interaction energy[2] of +4.5 kcal/mol for the two radical fragments, compared to eg -27 kcal/mol for the equivalent analysis of the N=N double bond in nitrosobenzene dimer[3] So here I take a look at another property of N≡N bonds via their hydrogenation energy (Scheme), mindful that the dinitrogen molecule requires forcing conditions to hydrogenate, in part because of the unfavourable entropy terms (See Wiki and also here for a calculation of ΔG298).

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References

  1. H. Rzepa, "The even more mysterious N≡N triple bond in a nitric oxide dimer.", 2025. https://doi.org/10.59350/rzepa.29429
  2. H. Rzepa, "N2O2 as strong dimer? bent NEDA 0 1 0 2 0 -2 Total Interaction (E) : 4.520 Wiberg NN bond index 1.0072 NN stretch 2604 cm-1", 2025. https://doi.org/10.14469/hpc/15468
  3. H. Rzepa, "Nitrosobenzene dimer NEDA=2, 0,1 0,1 0,1 Total Interaction (E) : -27.564", 2025. https://doi.org/10.14469/hpc/15444

The spin-offs from adding citations to blog posts.

Tuesday, August 19th, 2025

I started adding citations to my blog posts around 2012 using the Kcite plugin. Rogue Scholar is a service that monitors registered blog sources and adds all sorts of value to the original post, including identifying such citations and creating a list of them.

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The even more mysterious N≡N triple bond in a nitric oxide dimer.

Monday, August 18th, 2025

Previously, I pondered about the strange N=N double bond in nitrosobenzene dimer[1] as a follow up to commenting on the curly arrow mechanism of the dimerisation.[2] By the same curly arrow method, one can produce the below, showing how the simpler nitric oxide radical could potentially dimerise to a species with a N≡N triple bond! This involves a total of six electrons entering the N-N region, and hence raises the question of whether these all move in a single concerted/synchronous bond forming reaction, or whether they might go in (asynchronous) stages. Here are some calculations[3]) which might shed some light on this aspect.

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References

  1. H. Rzepa, "The mysterious N=N double bond in nitrosobenzene dimer.", 2025. https://doi.org/10.59350/rzepa.29383
  2. H. Rzepa, "Mechanism of the dimerisation of Nitrosobenzene.", 2025. https://doi.org/10.59350/rzepa.28849
  3. H. Rzepa, "N2O2 as strong dimer TS as biradical cis, G = -259.785500", 2025. https://doi.org/10.14469/hpc/15483

Energy decomposition analysis of hindered alkenes: Tetra t-butylethene and others.

Wednesday, August 13th, 2025

In the previous post,[1] I introduced the N=N double bond in nitrosobenzene dimer, arguing that even though it was a formal double bond, its bond dissociation energy made it nonetheless a very weak double bond! This was backed up by a technique known as energy decomposition analysis or EDA. Here I use a variant of this method  known as  NEDA to look at some other strained alkenes, including the famously non-existent tetra t-Butyl ethene.

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References

  1. H. Rzepa, "The mysterious N=N double bond in nitrosobenzene dimer.", 2025. https://doi.org/10.59350/rzepa.29383

The mysterious N=N double bond in nitrosobenzene dimer.

Monday, August 11th, 2025

In an earlier blog, I discussed[1] the curly arrows associated with the known dimerisation of nitrosobenzene, and how the N=N double bond (shown in red below) forms in a single concerted process.

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References

  1. H. Rzepa, "Mechanism of the dimerisation of Nitrosobenzene.", 2025. https://doi.org/10.59350/rzepa.28849

Cyclo-S6 (Hexathiane) – anomeric effects again!

Sunday, June 1st, 2025

I thought I was done with exploring anomeric effects in small sulfur rings. However, I then realised that all the systems that I had described had an odd number of atoms and that I had not looked at any even numbered rings. Thus hexasulfur is a smaller (known) ring version of S8, the latter by far the best known allotrope of this element of course.

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S7I1+: The largest anomeric effect exhibited by sulfur.

Wednesday, May 21st, 2025

In this series of posts about the electronic effects in small sulfur rings[1] I have explored increasingly large induced geometric effects. Here is the largest so far, for the compound S7I1+[2]

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References

  1. H. Rzepa, "5-Imino-5λ<sup>4</sup>-heptathiepane 3-oxide. More exuberent anomeric effects.", 2025. https://doi.org/10.59350/rzepa.28615
  2. J. Passmore, G. Sutherland, P. Taylor, T.K. Whidden, and P.S. White, "Preparations and x-ray crystal structures of iodo-cyclo-heptasulfur hexafluoroantimonate(V) and hexafluoroarsenate(V), S7ISbF6 and S7IAsF6", Inorganic Chemistry, vol. 20, pp. 3839-3845, 1981. https://doi.org/10.1021/ic50225a048

5-Imino-5λ4-heptathiepane 3-oxide. More exuberent anomeric effects.

Tuesday, May 20th, 2025

The two previous  posts[1],[2] on the topic of anomeric effects in 7-membered sulfur rings illustrated how orbital interactions between the lone pairs in the molecules and S-S bonds produced widely varying S-S bond lengths in the molecules, some are shorter than normal (which is ~2.05Å for e.g. the S8 ring) by ~ 0.1Å and some are longer by ~0.24Å. Here we extend this to the unknown molecule shown below.

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References

  1. H. Rzepa, "Cycloheptasulfur sulfoxide, S<sub>7</sub>O – Anomeric effects galore!", 2025. https://doi.org/10.59350/rzepa.28515
  2. H. Rzepa, "Cyclo-Heptasulfur, S<sub>7</sub> – a classic anomeric effect discovered during a pub lunch!", 2025. https://doi.org/10.59350/rzepa.28407