open access publication

Article, 2024

Self-Association and Microhydration of Phenol: Identification of Large-Amplitude Hydrogen Bond Librational Modes

Molecules, ISSN 1420-3049, 1431-5157, Volume 29, 13, Page 3012, 10.3390/molecules29133012

Contributors

Mihrin, Dmytro 0000-0002-2594-7028 (Corresponding author) [1] Feilberg, Karen Louise 0000-0001-7417-2380 [1] Larsen, René Wugt 0000-0003-2983-6795 (Corresponding author) [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Technical University of Denmark
  2. [NORA names: DTU Technical University of Denmark; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

The self-association mechanisms of phenol have represented long-standing challenges to quantum chemical methodologies owing to the competition between strongly directional intermolecular hydrogen bonding, weaker non-directional London dispersion forces and C-H⋯π interactions between the aromatic rings. The present work explores these subtle self-association mechanisms of relevance for biological molecular recognition processes via spectroscopic observations of large-amplitude hydrogen bond librational modes of phenol cluster molecules embedded in inert neon "quantum" matrices complemented by domain-based local pair natural orbital-coupled cluster DLPNO-CCSD(T) theory. The spectral signatures confirm a primarily intermolecular O-H⋯H hydrogen-bonded structure of the phenol dimer strengthened further by cooperative contributions from inter-ring London dispersion forces as supported by DLPNO-based local energy decomposition (LED) predictions. In the same way, the hydrogen bond librational bands observed for the trimeric cluster molecule confirm a pseudo-C3 symmetric cyclic cooperative hydrogen-bonded barrel-like potential energy minimum structure. This structure is vastly different from the sterically favored "chair" conformations observed for aliphatic alcohol cluster molecules of the same size owing to the additional stabilizing London dispersion forces and C-H⋯π interactions between the aromatic rings. The hydrogen bond librational transition observed for the phenol monohydrate finally confirms that phenol acts as a hydrogen bond donor to water in contrast to the hydrogen bond acceptor role observed for aliphatic alcohols.

Keywords

London, London dispersion forces, acceptor role, alcohol, aliphatic alcohols, aromatic ring, band, biological molecular recognition processes, bonds, chemical methodology, cluster molecules, competition, conformation, contribution, decomposition, dimer, directional intermolecular hydrogen bonds, dispersion forces, energy decomposition, energy minimum structures, force, hydrogen, hydrogen bonds, hydrogen-bonded structure, identification, interaction, intermolecular hydrogen bonds, librational band, librational modes, librational transitions, local energy decomposition, matrix, mechanism of phenol, mechanisms of relevance, methodology, microhydration, minimum structure, mode, molecular recognition processes, molecules, monohydrate, phenol, phenol dimer, prediction, process, quantum, quantum chemical methodology, recognition process, relevance, ring, role, self-association, self-association mechanism, signature, size, spectral signatures, spectroscopic observations, structure, transition, water

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