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Boron‐Based Chiral Helix Be 6 B 10 2− and Be 6 B 11 − Clusters: Structures, Chemical Bonding, and Formation Mechanism
Author(s) -
Feng LinYan,
Guo JinChang,
Li PengFei,
Zhai HuaJin
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
chemistry – an asian journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.18
H-Index - 106
eISSN - 1861-471X
pISSN - 1861-4728
DOI - 10.1002/asia.201901640
Subject(s) - intramolecular force , crystallography , helix (gastropod) , chemistry , ring (chemistry) , dimer , folding (dsp implementation) , boron , chemical bond , stereochemistry , ecology , organic chemistry , snail , electrical engineering , biology , engineering
Boron forms a rich variety of low‐dimensional nanosystems, including the newly discovered helix Be 6 B 10 2− ( 1 ) and Be 6 B 11 − ( 2 ) clusters. We report herein on the elucidation of chemical bonding in clusters 1 / 2 , using the modern quantum chemistry tools of canonical molecular orbital analyses and adaptive natural density partitioning (AdNDP). It is shown that clusters 1 / 2 contain a chiral helix Be 2 B 10 Be 2 or Be 2 B 11 Be 2 skeleton with a total of 11 and 12 segments, respectively, which effectively curve into “helical pseudo rings” and chemically consist of two “quasicircles” as defined by their anchoring Be centers. The helix skeleton is connected via Lewis‐type B−B and Be−B−Be σ bonds, being further stabilized by island π/σ bonds and a loose π bond at the junction. The Be 6 component in 1 / 2 assumes a distorted prism shape only physically, and it is fragmented into four parts: two terminal Be 2 dimers and two isolated Be centers. A Be 2 dimer at the far end manages to bend over and cap a quasicircle from one side of B plane. Consequently, each quasicircle of a helical pseudo ring is capped from opposite sides by two Be 2 /Be units, facilitating intramolecular charge‐transfers of 5 electrons from Be to B. Overall, the folding of B helix involves as many as 10 electrons. The enormous electrostatics offers the ultimate driving forces for B helix formation.

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