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Starting a subnanoscale tank tread: dynamic fluxionality of boron-based B(10)Ca alloy cluster

Alloying an elongated B(10) cluster with Ca is shown to give rise to a dynamically fluxional B(10)Ca cluster, the latter behaving like a tank tread at the subnanoscale. Computer global search identifies the B(10)Ca C(2) ((1)A) global-minimum structure, which is chiral in nature and retains the quasi...

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Autores principales: Wang, Ying-Jin, Feng, Lin-Yan, Zhai, Hua-Jin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9473234/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36132257
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8na00256h
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author Wang, Ying-Jin
Feng, Lin-Yan
Zhai, Hua-Jin
author_facet Wang, Ying-Jin
Feng, Lin-Yan
Zhai, Hua-Jin
author_sort Wang, Ying-Jin
collection PubMed
description Alloying an elongated B(10) cluster with Ca is shown to give rise to a dynamically fluxional B(10)Ca cluster, the latter behaving like a tank tread at the subnanoscale. Computer global search identifies the B(10)Ca C(2) ((1)A) global-minimum structure, which is chiral in nature and retains the quasi-planar moiety of bare B(10) cluster with Ca capped at one side, forming a half-sandwich. The rotation barrier of B(10)Ca cluster is reduced with respect to B(10) by one order of magnitude, down to 1 kcal mol(−1) at the PBE0/6-311+G* level, which demonstrates structural fluxionality at 600 K and beyond via molecular dynamics simulations. Structurewise, the Ca alloying in B(10)Ca cluster generates rhombic defect holes, preactivating the species and making it flexible against deformation. Chemical bonding analyses indicate that the B(10)Ca cluster is a charge-transfer [B(10)](2−)[Ca](2+) complex, being doubly π/σ aromatic with the 6π and 10σ electron-counting. Such a pattern offers ideal π/σ delocalization and facilitates fluxionality. In contrast, bare B(10) cluster has conflicting aromaticity with 6π and 8σ electrons, which is nonfluxional with a barrier of 12 kcal mol(−1). Double π/σ aromaticity versus conflicting aromaticity is a key mechanism that distinguishes between fluxional B(10)Ca and nonfluxional B(10) clusters, offering a compelling example that the concept of aromaticity (and double aromaticity) can be exploited to design dynamically fluxional nanosystems.
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spelling pubmed-94732342022-09-20 Starting a subnanoscale tank tread: dynamic fluxionality of boron-based B(10)Ca alloy cluster Wang, Ying-Jin Feng, Lin-Yan Zhai, Hua-Jin Nanoscale Adv Chemistry Alloying an elongated B(10) cluster with Ca is shown to give rise to a dynamically fluxional B(10)Ca cluster, the latter behaving like a tank tread at the subnanoscale. Computer global search identifies the B(10)Ca C(2) ((1)A) global-minimum structure, which is chiral in nature and retains the quasi-planar moiety of bare B(10) cluster with Ca capped at one side, forming a half-sandwich. The rotation barrier of B(10)Ca cluster is reduced with respect to B(10) by one order of magnitude, down to 1 kcal mol(−1) at the PBE0/6-311+G* level, which demonstrates structural fluxionality at 600 K and beyond via molecular dynamics simulations. Structurewise, the Ca alloying in B(10)Ca cluster generates rhombic defect holes, preactivating the species and making it flexible against deformation. Chemical bonding analyses indicate that the B(10)Ca cluster is a charge-transfer [B(10)](2−)[Ca](2+) complex, being doubly π/σ aromatic with the 6π and 10σ electron-counting. Such a pattern offers ideal π/σ delocalization and facilitates fluxionality. In contrast, bare B(10) cluster has conflicting aromaticity with 6π and 8σ electrons, which is nonfluxional with a barrier of 12 kcal mol(−1). Double π/σ aromaticity versus conflicting aromaticity is a key mechanism that distinguishes between fluxional B(10)Ca and nonfluxional B(10) clusters, offering a compelling example that the concept of aromaticity (and double aromaticity) can be exploited to design dynamically fluxional nanosystems. RSC 2018-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9473234/ /pubmed/36132257 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8na00256h Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Wang, Ying-Jin
Feng, Lin-Yan
Zhai, Hua-Jin
Starting a subnanoscale tank tread: dynamic fluxionality of boron-based B(10)Ca alloy cluster
title Starting a subnanoscale tank tread: dynamic fluxionality of boron-based B(10)Ca alloy cluster
title_full Starting a subnanoscale tank tread: dynamic fluxionality of boron-based B(10)Ca alloy cluster
title_fullStr Starting a subnanoscale tank tread: dynamic fluxionality of boron-based B(10)Ca alloy cluster
title_full_unstemmed Starting a subnanoscale tank tread: dynamic fluxionality of boron-based B(10)Ca alloy cluster
title_short Starting a subnanoscale tank tread: dynamic fluxionality of boron-based B(10)Ca alloy cluster
title_sort starting a subnanoscale tank tread: dynamic fluxionality of boron-based b(10)ca alloy cluster
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9473234/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36132257
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c8na00256h
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