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The NICS‐ XY ‐Scan: Identification of Local and Global Ring Currents in Multi‐Ring Systems
Author(s) -
GershoniPoranne Renana,
Stanger Am
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.201304307
Subject(s) - antiaromaticity , aromaticity , ring (chemistry) , chemical shift , magnetic field , chemistry , field (mathematics) , ring current , nuclear magnetic resonance , molecule , physics , mathematics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , pure mathematics , earth's magnetic field
Nucleus‐independent chemical shift (NICS)‐based methods are very popular for the determination of the induced magnetic field under an external magnetic field. These methods are used mostly (but not only) for the determination of the aromaticity and antiaromaticity of molecules and ions, both qualitatively and quantitatively. The ghost atom that serves as the NICS probe senses the induced magnetic field and reports it in the form of an NMR chemical shift. However, the source of the field cannot be determined by NICS. Thus, in a multi‐ring system that may contain more than one induced current circuit (and therefore more than one source of the induced magnetic field) the NICS value may represent the sum of many induced magnetic fields. This may lead to wrong assignments of the aromaticity (and antiaromaticity) of the systems under study. In this paper, we present a NICS‐based method for the determination of local and global ring currents in conjugated multi‐ring systems. The method involves placing the NICS probes along the X axis, and if needed, along the Y axis, at a constant height above the system under study. Following the change in the induced field along these axes allows the identification of global and local induced currents. The best NICS type to use for these scans is NICS πZZ , but it is shown that at a height of 1.7 Å above the molecular plane, NICS ZZ provides the same qualitative picture. This method, namely the NICS‐ XY ‐scan, gives information equivalent to that obtained through current density analysis methods, and in some cases, provides even more details.