Microsolvation of Fluoromethane

Fluorinated organic compounds are ubiquitous in the pharmaceutical and agricultural industries. To better discern the mode of action of these compounds, it is critical to understand the potential for and strength of hydrogen bonds involving fluorine. It is known that CH3F forms a hydrogen bond with...

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Published inThe journal of physical chemistry. A, Molecules, spectroscopy, kinetics, environment, & general theory Vol. 120; no. 38; pp. 7519 - 7528
Main Author Rosenberg, Robert E
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Chemical Society 29.09.2016
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Summary:Fluorinated organic compounds are ubiquitous in the pharmaceutical and agricultural industries. To better discern the mode of action of these compounds, it is critical to understand the potential for and strength of hydrogen bonds involving fluorine. It is known that CH3F forms a hydrogen bond with H2O in the gas phase but does not dissolve in bulk water. This paper examines CH3F surrounded by one to six water molecules. For systems of similar topologies, CH3F formed hydrogen bonds of nearly the same strength as water. Although CH3F can bind to a second water cluster with only a modest loss in binding energy, it must bind to these clusters as a double hydrogen bond acceptor. This means that CH3F cannot form a low-energy cyclic 2D hydrogen bonding network with water molecules, which limits its solubility in bulk water. However, CH3F should be able to bind to the periphery of small hydrogen bonding networks. These conclusions were not appreciably altered by SMD calculations. A more complete consideration of solvation, especially entropic effects, was not undertaken. Data for geometries, population changes, and vibrational frequency shifts were also analyzed and compared to binding energies.
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ISSN:1089-5639
1520-5215
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpca.6b07063