info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Understanding the nature of bonding interactions in the carbonic acid dimers
Fecha
2019-01Registro en:
Zapata Escobar, Andy Danian; Murillo López, Juliana Andrea; Hadad, C. Z.; Restrepo Cossio, Albeiro Alonso; Understanding the nature of bonding interactions in the carbonic acid dimers; Springer; Journal of Molecular Modeling; 25; 20; 1-2019; 1-10
1610-2940
0948-5023
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Zapata Escobar, Andy Danian
Murillo López, Juliana Andrea
Hadad, C. Z.
Restrepo Cossio, Albeiro Alonso
Resumen
Carbonic acid dimer, (CA)2, (H2CO3)2, helps to explain the existence of this acid as a stable species, different to a simple sum between carbon dioxide and water. Five distinct, well characterized types of intermolecular interactions contribute to the stabilization of the dimers, namely, C=O⋯H–O, H–O⋯H–O, C=O⋯C=O, C=O⋯O–H, and C–O⋯O–H. In many cases, the stabilizing hydrogen bonds are of at least the same strength as in the water dimer. We dissect the nature of intermolecular interactions and assess their influence on stability. For a set of 40 (H2CO3)2 isomers, C=O⋯H–O hydrogen bonds between the carbonyl oxygen in one CA molecule and the acidic hydrogen in the hydroxyl group at a second CA molecule are the major stabilizing factors because they exhibit the shortest interaction distances, the largest orbital interaction energies, and the largest accumulation of electron densities around the corresponding bond critical points. In most cases, these are closed-shell hydrogen bonds, however, in a few instances, some covalent character is induced. Bifurcated hydrogen bonds are a common occurrence in the dimers of carbonic acid, resulting in a complex picture with multiple orbital interactions of various strengths. Two anti–anti monomers interacting via the strongest C=O⋯H–O hydrogen bonds are the ingredients for the formation of the lowest energy dimers.