Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1410581 | Journal of Molecular Structure | 2008 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Vibrational spectra [FT IR (gas and liquid); FT Raman (liquid)] and quantum chemical calculations at different levels of theory (HF, B3LYP and MP2 using 6-31G(d), 6-311 + G(2df) and cc-pVTZ base sets) demonstrate that N-(chloroformyl) iminosulfur dichloride (ClC(O)NSCl2) is present in the fluid phases as a mixture of syn-syn and syn-anti forms (syn orientation of the CN bond with respect to the ClSCl bisector; syn or anti orientation of the carbonyl group with respect to the NS bond). From the relative IR intensities of the CO stretching bands the contribution of the syn-anti form is calculated to be 6(2)% in the gas, corresponding to a Gibbs free energy difference ÎG° = G°syn-anti â G°syn-syn = 1.6(3) kcal/mol. This value is reproduced very well by quantum chemical calculations which include electron correlation effects (ÎG° = 1.59-1.91 kcal/mol). The HF approximation overestimates this energy difference (ÎG° = 4.45 kcal/mol). On the basis of theoretical calculations and reported data for other iminosulfur dichlorides, a complete assignment of the fundamental modes for ClC(O)NSCl2 is proposed.
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Authors
Norma L. Robles, Edgardo H. Cutin, Rosa M.S. Álvarez, Heinz Oberhammer,