Artigo Revisado por pares

The Short N−F Bond in N 2 F + and How Pauli Repulsion Influences Bond Lengths. Theoretical Study of N 2 X + , NF 3 X + , and NH 3 X + (X = F, H)

2002; American Chemical Society; Volume: 124; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1021/ja0117837

ISSN

1943-2984

Autores

F. Matthias Bickelhaupt, Roger L. DeKock, Evert Jan Baerends,

Tópico(s)

Ammonia Synthesis and Nitrogen Reduction

Resumo

Exceptionally short N [bond] F bond distances of only 1.217 A (crystal) and 1.246 A (gas phase) have been reported for N(2)F(+), making it the shortest N [bond] F bond ever observed. To trace the origin of this structural phenomenon, we have analyzed the model systems N(2)X(+), NF(3)X(+), and NH(3)X(+) (X [double bond] F, H) using generalized gradient approximation density functional theory at BP86/TZ2P. In good agreement with experiment, the computations yield an extremely short N [bond] F bond for N(2)F(+): we find N [bond] F bond distances in N(2)F(+), NF(4)(+), and NH(3)F(+) of 1.245, 1.339, and 1.375 A, respectively. The N [bond] X bonding mechanisms are quantitatively analyzed in the framework of Kohn-Sham MO theory. At variance with the current hypothesis, reduced steric and other Pauli repulsion (of substituents or lone pairs at N with F) rather than the extent of s [bond] p hybridization of N (i.e., sp versus sp(3)) are responsible for the much shorter N [bond] F distance in N(2)F(+) compared to NF(4)(+). The results for our nitrogen compounds are furthermore discussed in the more general context of how bond lengths are determined by both bonding and repulsive orbital interactions.

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