Litcius/Paper detail

The nature of multiple boron-nitrogen bonds studied using electron localization function (ELF), electron density (AIM), and natural bond orbital (NBO) methods

Grzegorz Mierzwa, Agnieszka J. Gordon, Sławomir Berski

2020Journal of Molecular Modeling53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Local nature of the boron-nitrogen (BN) bonding with different formal multiplicities (B≡N, B=N, B-N) have been investigated for 25 experimentally established organoboron molecules in both real and the Hilbert space, using topological analysis of electron localization function (ELF), electron density (AIM), and natural bond orbital (NBO) method. Each BN bond has been represented (ELF) by the bonding disynaptic attractor V(B,N), with the basin electron population between 5.72e and 1.83e, confirming possible existence of all the three bond types. A covalent character of bonding can be associated with the dative mechanism due to the V(B,N) bonding basin formed mainly (91–96%) by the N electron density. Similarly, the NBO method shows 2-center natural orbitals, consisting largely of the hybrids from the N atom. The AIM analysis yields the features typical for shared (H (3,−1) ( r ) < 0) and closed-shell (∇ 2 ρ (3,−1) ( r ) > 0) interactions. The delocalization indices, describing electron exchanges between B and N quantum atoms, are smaller than 1.5, even for formally very short triple B≡N bonds.

Topics & Concepts

Natural bond orbitalElectron localization functionChemistryCovalent bondAtomic orbitalMolecular orbitalAtoms in moleculesBond orderCrystallographyChemical bondComputational chemistryElectron densityElectronThree-center two-electron bondTriple bondDensity functional theoryMoleculePhysicsBond lengthQuantum mechanicsDouble bondCrystal structureOrganic chemistryCrystallography and molecular interactionsNonlinear Optical Materials ResearchAdvanced Chemical Physics Studies