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Stable (long-bonded) dimers via the quantitative self-association of different cationic, anionic, and uncharged π-radicals:: Structures, energetics, and optical transitions

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 125, Issue 40, Pages 12161-12171

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja0364928

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Unusual dinners with wide interplanar separations, that is, very long bonds with d(D) approximate to 3.05 Angstrom, are common to the spontaneous self-association of various organic pi-radicals in solution and in the crystalline solid state, independent of whether they are derived from negatively charged anion radicals of planar electron acceptors (TCNE-., TCNQ(-.), DDQ(-.), CA(-.)), positively charged biphenylene cation-radical (OMB+.), or neutral phenalene radical (PHEN.). All dimeric species are characterized by intense absorption bands in the near-IR region that are diagnostic of the charge-transfer transitions previously identified with intermolecular associations of various electron-donor/acceptor dyads. The extensive delocalizations of a pair of pi-electrons accord with the sizable values of (i) the enthalpies (-DeltaH(D)) and entropies (-DeltaS(D)) of pi-dimerization measured by quantitative UV-vis/EPR spectroscopies and (ii) the electronic coupling element H-ab evaluated from the strongly allowed optical transitions, irrespective of whether the diamagnetic dimeric species bear a double-negative charge as in (TCNE)(2)(2-), (TCNQ)(2)(2-), (DDQ)(2)(2-), (CA)(2)(2-) or a double-positive charge as in (OMB)(2)(2+) or are uncharged as in (PHEN)(2). These long-bonded dimers persist in solution as well as in the solid state and suffer only minor perturbations with Deltad(D) < 10% from extra-dimer forces that may be imposed by counterion electrostatics, crystal packing, and so forth. The characteristic optical transitions in such diamagnetic two-electron dimers are shown to be related to those in the corresponding paramagnetic one-electron pimers of the same pi-radicals with their parent acceptor, both in general accord with Mulliken theory.

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