Litcius/Paper detail

Dispersion-Corrected DFT Methods for Applications in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Crystallography

Sean T. Holmes, Cameron S. Vojvodin, Robert W. Schurko

2020The Journal of Physical Chemistry A38 citationsDOI

Abstract

Nuclear electric field gradient (EFG) tensor parameters depend strongly on electronic structures, making their calculation from first principles an excellent metric for the prediction, refinement, and optimization of crystal structures. Here, we use plane-wave density functional theory (DFT) calculations of EFG tensors in organic solids to optimize the Grimme (D2) and Tkatchenko–Scheffler (TS) atomic-pairwise force field dispersion corrections. Refinements using these new force field correction methods result in better representations of true crystal structures, as gauged by calculations of 177 14N, 17O, and 35Cl EFG tensors from 95 materials. The most striking result is the degree by which calculations of 35Cl EFG tensors of chloride ions match with experiment, due to the ability of these new methods to properly locate the positions of hydrogen atoms participating in H···Cl– hydrogen bonds. These refined structures also feature atomic coordinates that are more similar to those of neutron diffraction structures than those obtained from calculations that do not employ the optimized force fields. Additionally, we assess the quality of these new energy-minimization protocols for the prediction of 15N magnetic shielding tensors and unit cell volumes, which complement the larger analysis using EFG tensors, since these quantities have different physical origins. It is hoped that these results will be useful in future nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) crystallographic studies and will be of great interest to a wide variety of researchers, in fields including NMR spectroscopy, computational chemistry, crystallography, pharmaceutical sciences, and crystal engineering.

Topics & Concepts

Electric field gradientNeutron diffractionDensity functional theoryChemistryTensor (intrinsic definition)Crystal structureNeutron spectroscopyNuclear magnetic resonanceNeutronMolecular physicsComputational chemistryCrystallographyPhysicsElectric fieldNeutron scatteringQuantum mechanicsMathematicsPure mathematicsAdvanced NMR Techniques and ApplicationsSolid-state spectroscopy and crystallographyInorganic Fluorides and Related Compounds