posted on 2016-12-29, 15:48authored byRaphael J. F. Berger, Jürgen Schoiber, Uwe Monkowius
Gold
is an electron-rich metal with a high electronegativity comparable
to that of sulfur. Hence, hydrogen bonds of the Au(I)···H–E
(E = electronegative element) type should be possible, but their existence
is still under debate. Experimental results are scarce and often contradictory.
As guidance for possible preparative work, we have theoretically investigated
(ppyH)Au(SPh) (ppy = 2-phenylpyridine) bearing two
monoanionic ligands which are not strongly electronegative at the
same time to further increase the charge density on the gold(I) atom.
The protonated pyridine nitrogen atom in ppy is geometrically ideally
suited to place a proton in close proximity to the gold atom in a
favorable geometry for a classical hydrogen bond arrangement. Indeed,
the results of the calculations indicate that the hydrogen bonded
conformation of (ppyH)Au(SPh) represents a minimum geometry
with bond metrics in the expected range for medium-strong hydrogen
bonds [r(N–H) = 1.043 Å, r(H···Au) = 2.060 Å, a(N–H···Au)
= 141.4°]. The energy difference between the conformer containing
the H···Au bond and another conformer without a hydrogen
bond amounts to 7.8 kcal mol–1, which might serve
as an estimate of the hydrogen bond strength. Spectroscopic properties
were calculated, yielding further characteristics of such hydrogen
bonded gold species.