Boron Tunneling in the "Weak" Bond-Stretch Isomerization of N-B Lewis Adducts.

2021
Some nitrile-boron halide adducts exhibit a double-well potential energy surface with two distinct minima: a "long bond" geometry (LB, a van der Waals interaction mostly based on electrostatics, but including a residual charge transfer component) and a "short bond" structure (SB, a covalent dative bond). This behavior can be considered as a "weak" form of bond stretch isomerism. Our computations reveal that complexes RCN-BX3 (R = CH3, FCH2, BrCH2, and X = Cl, Br) exhibit a fast interconversion from the LB to the SB geometries even close to the absolute zero thanks to a boron atom tunneling mechanism. The computed half-lives of the meta-stable LB compounds vary between minutes to nanoseconds at cryogenic conditions. Accordingly, we predict that the long bond structures are practically impossible to isolate or characterize, in agreement with previous matrix-isolation experiments.
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