4.3 Article

Chalcogen•••Chalcogen Bonding in Molybdenum Disulfide, Molybdenum Diselenide and Molybdenum Ditelluride Dimers as Prototypes for a Basic Understanding of the Local Interfacial Chemical Bonding Environment in 2D Layered Transition Metal Dichalcogenides

Journal

INORGANICS
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/inorganics10010011

Keywords

transition metal dichalcogenides; chalcogen-centered chalcogen bonding; nature of non-covalent interactions; first-principles studies; geometry; energy stability; orbital and charge density analyses

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation, Pretoria, South Africa
  2. University of the Witwatersrand
  3. [615-8245]

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Computational methods were used to analyze the intermolecular interactions in dimers of molybdenum dichalcogenides, revealing certain hybrid functionals capable of replicating these interactions. The study discussed the geometries and energies of the dimers, as well as the origins of intermolecular bonding interactions.
An attempt was made, using computational methods, to understand whether the intermolecular interactions in the dimers of molybdenum dichalcogenides MoCh(2) (Ch = chalcogen, element of group 16, especially S, Se and Te) and similar mixed-chalcogenide derivatives resemble the room temperature experimentally observed interactions in the interfacial regions of molybdenites and their other mixed-chalcogen derivatives. To this end, MP2(Full)/def2-TVZPPD level electronic structure calculations on nine dimer systems, including (MoCh(2))(2) and (MoChCh '(2))(2) (Ch, Ch ' = S, Se and Te), were carried out not only to demonstrate the energetic stability of these systems in the gas phase, but also to reproduce the intermolecular geometrical properties that resemble the interfacial geometries of 2D layered MoCh(2) systems reported in the crystalline phase. Among the six DFT functionals (single and double hybrids) benchmarked against MP2(full), it was found that the double hybrid functional B2PLYPD3 has some ability to reproduce the intermolecular geometries and binding energies. The intermolecular geometries and binding energies of all nine dimers are discussed, together with the charge density topological aspects of the chemical bonding interactions that emerge from the application of the quantum theory of atoms in molecules (QTAIM), the isosurface topology of the reduced density gradient noncovalent index, interaction region indicator and independent gradient model (IGM) approaches. While the electrostatic surface potential model fails to explain the origin of the S center dot center dot center dot S interaction in the (MoS2)(2) dimer, we show that the intermolecular bonding interactions in all nine dimers examined are a result of hyperconjugative charge transfer delocalizations between the lone-pair on (Ch/Ch ') and/or the pi-orbitals of a Mo-Ch/Ch ' bond of one monomer and the d(pi*) anti-bonding orbitals of the same Mo-Ch/Ch ' bond in the second monomer during dimer formation, and vice versa. The HOMO-LUMO gaps calculated with the MN12-L functional were 0.9, 1.0, and 1.1 eV for MoTe2, MoSe2 and MoS2, respectively, which match very well with the solid-state theoretical (SCAN-rVV10)/experimental band gaps of 0.75/0.88, 0.90/1.09 and 0.93/1.23 eV of the corresponding systems, respectively. We observed that the gas phase dimers examined are perhaps prototypical for a basic understanding of the interfacial/inter-layer interactions in molybdenum-based dichalcogenides and their derivatives.

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