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Density functional theory study of self-association of N-methylformamide and its effect on intramolecular and intermolecular geometrical parameters and thecis/transpopulation

Authors :
Paloma Martínez-Ruiz
A. Garcia Fraile
E. Teso Vilar
A. Garcia Martinez
Source :
The Journal of Chemical Physics. 124:234305
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 2006.

Abstract

The single-point total energy (E) of several acyclic and cyclic oligomers of N-methylformamide (NMF) was computed by the first time without any geometrical restriction, using the B3LYP6-31G* method of the density functional theory in order to determine the effect of self-association on intramolecular geometrical parameters of cis- and trans-NMF, the intermolecular distances of the hydrogen-bonding chains formed by NMF as well as intermolecular association energies including counterpoise corrections. It is concluded that liquid NMF exists mainly as polymers formed by self-association of trans-NMF units, whereas the cis-NMF isomer occurs as isolated units inserted along the chains. These computational results are in accordance with the experimentally determined predominance (ca. 90%) of trans-NMF population by means of (1)H- NMR and other spectroscopic techniques, but in severe contradiction with a recent interpretation of x-ray diffraction data on liquid NMF, postulating a cyclic trimer of cis-NMF (c-C(3)) as the predominating species. The counterpoise-corrected values of the association energy, DeltaE(CP), calculated for cyclic oligomers, increase with the polymerization degree (n) revealing a high grade of cooperative effect for amidic hydrogen-bonded chains. Noteworthy, the difference between the DeltaE(CP) values of the cyclic cis- and trans-homooligomers of NMF is positive for n=2 and 3 but negative for nor =4.

Details

ISSN :
10897690 and 00219606
Volume :
124
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Chemical Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....70c443bc821c27c5b51814f93d10df2b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2204910