1 research outputs found
Phenyl- vs Cyclohexyl-Substitution in Methanol: Implications for the OH Conformation and for Dispersion-Affected Aggregation from Vibrational Spectra in Supersonic Jets
The monomers and hydrogen-bonded
dimers of benzyl alcohol, cyclohexylmethanol,
and 2-methyl-1-propanol are investigated by jet-FTIR spectroscopy,
complemented by Raman spectra and quantum chemical calulations, including
CCSD(T) corrections. A large variety of London dispersion effects
from the interacting carbon cycles is revealed, sometimes adding to
and sometimes competing with the alcoholic hydrogen bonds. Conformational (in-)flexibility provides the key
for understanding
these effects, and this requires accurate predictions of monomer conformational
preferences, which are shown to be subtly at variance with experiment
even for some triple-ζ MP2 calculations. In some observed dimers,
cooperative OH···OH···π patterns
are sacrificed to optimize σ–π dispersion interactions.
In other competitive dimers, dispersion interactions are far from
maximized, because that would imply a substantial weakening of the
hydrogen bond. In the series from methanol dimer to 1-indanol dimer,
which this contribution bridges, B3LYP-D3 appears to switch from an
overestimation to a slight underestimation of cohesion, but overall
it provides a very useful modeling tool for vibrational spectra of
systems affected by both hydrogen bonds and London dispersion