Singh Sumitra, Hsu Po-Jen, Kuo Jer-Lai, Patwari G Naresh
Department of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Powai, Mumbai 400076, India.
Phys Chem Chem Phys. 2021 Apr 28;23(16):9938-9947. doi: 10.1039/d1cp00279a.
The aggregates of monofluorinated phenylacetylenes in the gas-phase, investigated using the IR-UV double resonance spectroscopic method in combination with extensive structural search and electronic structure calculations, reveal the formation of liquid-like clusters with a π-stacked dimeric core. The structural assignment based on the IR spectra in the acetylenic and aromatic C-H stretching regions suggests that, unlike the parent non-fluorinated phenylacetylene, the substitution of a F atom on the phenyl ring increases the dipole moment, leading to robustness in the formation of a ππ stacked dimer, which propagates incorporating C-Hπ_{Ar/Ac} and C-HF interactions involving both acetylenic and aromatic C-H groups. The structural evolution of fluorophenylacetylene aggregates in the gas phase shows marginal effects due to fluorine atom position on the phenyl ring, with substitution in the para-position tending towards phenylacetylene. The present study signifies that the ππ stacked dimers act as a nucleus for the growth of higher clusters to which other molecular units are added predominantly via the {Ar}C-Hπ{Ar} type of interaction and the dominant interactions present in the crystal structures gradually emerge with increasing cluster size. Based on these features, gas-phase clusters of fluorophenylacetylene are hypothesized as "liquid-like clusters" acting as intermediates in the generation of various polymorphic forms starting from a ππ stacked dimer as the core molecular unit.