6533b834fe1ef96bd129e19d

RESEARCH PRODUCT

On novel magnetic probe for fullerene characterization: Theoretical studies on NMR parameters of free and confined in fullerenes HD and H2 molecules

Marzena JankowskaTeobald KupkaLeszek Stobinski

subject

Models MolecularMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyFullereneHydrogenchemistry.chemical_element010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesDFTComputational chemistryHD molecule0103 physical sciencesPhysics::Atomic and Molecular ClustersMaterials ChemistryMoleculeCCSD(T)Physical and Theoretical ChemistrySpectroscopyCoupling constant010304 chemical physicsfullereneBenzeneNuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopyComputer Graphics and Computer-Aided DesignSmall molecule0104 chemical sciencesCoupled clusterModels ChemicalchemistryChemical physicsconstansAnisotropyQuantum TheoryDensity functional theoryFullerenesindirect nuclear spin–spin couplingHydrogen

description

Chemical characterization and separation of individual fullerenes from a raw reaction mixture need new and efficient tools, including rapid spectroscopic techniques. Recent "molecular surgery" synthesis of endohedral complexes of fullerenes with selected atoms and small molecules has opened a new path for experimental and theoretical studies on structural and spectroscopic properties of these molecular systems. Among them are fullerenes with molecular hydrogen confined within a nanoscale cavity. In this work we report on quantum-chemical prediction of nuclear magnetic shielding (and chemical shift) and indirect spin-spin coupling constant in free HD and H2 molecules, as well as models of confined dihydrogen using the coupled cluster with single and double excitations (CCSD) and density functional theory (DFT) levels of theory. Inspired with the recent experimental NMR studies on HD and H2 molecules confined inside C60 fullerene we systematically investigated the sensitivity of (1)H nuclear magnetic shielding of H2 and indirect spin-spin coupling constant (1)JHD in HD molecules to the interatomic separation in the gas phase, in the presence of benzene and inside fullerene cages of different size. The sensitivity of both NMR parameters to confinement is discussed in terms of very weak non-covalent interactions of HD and H2 with fullerene cage.

10.1016/j.jmgm.2015.08.009http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1093326315300425