Directionality of dihydrogen bonds: the role of transition metal atoms

Chemphyschem. 2012 Aug 6;13(11):2677-87. doi: 10.1002/cphc.201200097. Epub 2012 Jun 5.

Abstract

A theoretical study on two series of electron-rich group 8 hydrides is carried out to evaluate involvement of the transition metal in dihydrogen bonding. To this end, the structural and electronic parameters are computed at the DFT/B3PW91 level for hydrogen-bonded adducts of [(PP(3))MH(2)] and [Cp*MH(dppe)] (M = Fe, Ru, Os; PP(3) = κ(4)-P(CH(2)CH(2)PPh(2))(3), dppe = κ(2)-Ph(2)PCH(2)CH(2)PPh(2)) with CF(3)CH(2)OH (TFE) as proton donor. The results are compared with those of adduct [Cp(2)NbH(3)]⋅TFE featuring a "pure" dihydrogen bond, and classical hydrogen bonds in pyridine⋅TFE and Me(3)N⋅TFE. Deviation of the H⋅⋅⋅H-A fragment from linearity is shown to originate from the metal participation in dihydrogen bonding. The latter is confirmed by the electronic parameters obtained by NBO and AIM analysis. Considered together, orbital interaction energies and hydrogen bond ellipticity are salient indicators of this effect and allow the MH⋅⋅⋅HA interaction to be described as a bifurcate hydrogen bond. The impact of the M⋅⋅⋅HA interaction is shown to increase on descending the group, and this explains the experimental trends in mechanisms of proton-transfer reactions via MH⋅⋅⋅HA intermediates. Strengthening of the M⋅⋅⋅H interaction in the case of electron-rich 5d metal hydrides leads to direct proton transfer to the metal atom.