4.8 Article

Hydrogen atoms can be located accurately and precisely by x-ray crystallography

Journal

SCIENCE ADVANCES
Volume 2, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1600192

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP110105347, DE140101330]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Emmy Noether grant) [GR4451/1-1]
  3. Polish National Science Centre (MAESTRO) [DEC-2012/04/A/ST5/00609]
  4. Interdisciplinary Centre for Mathematical and Computational Modeling at the University of Warsaw [G53-17]
  5. Wroclaw Centre for Networking and Supercomputing [115]
  6. Australian Research Council [DE140101330] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Precise and accurate structural information on hydrogen atoms is crucial to the study of energies of interactions important for crystal engineering, materials science, medicine, and pharmacy, and to the estimation of physical and chemical properties in solids. However, hydrogen atoms only scatter x-radiation weakly, so x-rays have not been used routinely to locate them accurately. Textbooks and teaching classes still emphasize that hydrogen atoms cannot be located with x-rays close to heavy elements; instead, neutron diffraction is needed. We show that, contrary to widespread expectation, hydrogen atoms can be located very accurately using x-ray diffraction, yielding bond lengths involving hydrogen atoms (A-H) that are in agreement with results from neutron diffraction mostly within a single standard deviation. The precision of the determination is also comparable between x-ray and neutron diffraction results. This has been achieved at resolutions as low as 0.8 angstrom using Hirshfeld atom refinement (HAR). We have applied HAR to 81 crystal structures of organicmolecules and compared the A-H bond lengths with those from neutron measurements for A-H bonds sorted into bonds of the same class. We further show in a selection of inorganic compounds that hydrogen atoms can be located in bridging positions and close to heavy transition metals accurately and precisely. We anticipate that, in the future, conventional x-radiation sources at in-house diffractometers can be used routinely for locating hydrogen atoms in small molecules accurately instead of large-scale facilities such as spallation sources or nuclear reactors.

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