Home Categorizing Chalcogen, Pnictogen, and Tetrel Bonds, and Other Interactions Involving Groups 14-16 Elements
Article Publicly Available

Categorizing Chalcogen, Pnictogen, and Tetrel Bonds, and Other Interactions Involving Groups 14-16 Elements

Published/Copyright: December 16, 2016
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

The objective of this two-year project is to develop a non-ambiguous terminology for interactions formed by chalcogens, pnictogens, and tetrels, namely the elements of Groups 16, 15, and 14, respectively. Group 16-14 elements can form attractive interactions with both nucleophiles and electrophiles. All of these interactions will be examined systematically in order to identify and to classify cases where the Group 16-14 elements work as electrophilic species. A consensus is emerging in the chemical community that these latter interactions be named chalcogen bond, pnictogen bond, and tetrel bond. [1]

This project will assess and register this consensus by involving the whole community of researchers dealing with the study and use of these intermolecular interactions. Thanks to this involvement, modern definitions of chalcogen, pnictogen, and tetrel bonds will be issued; they will be as general as possible, and will take into account all current experimental and theoretical pieces of information on gaseous and condensed systems in chemical and biological systems. Consistent with the use of the terms hydrogen and halogen bond only for interactions where hydrogen and halogens are the electrophiles, it will be proposed that the terms chalcogen bond, pnictogen bond, and tetrel bond are used exclusively for interactions wherein the respective elements are the electrophile. It is intended by the Task Group of this project that interactions where Group 16-14 elements work as the nucleophile are named after the name of the Group the electrophilic atom belongs to. For instance, it is expected that, in keeping with the common terminology, interactions wherein a sulfur atom shares electron density with an electron deficient hydrogen are named hydrogen bonds.

The Project will contribute to the development of an unambiguous, systematic, and periodic naming of most interactions where it is possible to identify an element or moiety working as the electrophile. [1] The proposed terminology will balance wide applicability (i.e., generality) and robust descriptive power (i.e., specificity) and convey specific information on the interactions, such as their polar characters and geometric features. This nomenclature will be helpful in systemizing the field of interactions and in clarifying intrinsic or extrinsic relationships between concepts. [2]

A brief description of the state of the art of the topics addressed in this Project is given below with the aim to involve all those interested in related fields. The ability of Group 16-14 elements to form attractive interactions with both nucleophiles and electrophiles is a consequence of the highly anisotropic distribution of the electron density around these elements. In elements of Group 16-14 forming σ-bonds, areas of lower electron density, with an often positive electrostatic potential named the σ-hole, are present at the extension of covalent σ-bonds formed by these elements. Areas of higher electron density exist on the element’s surface, where the electrostatic potential is negative. [3] Nucleophiles preferentially enter the region(s) of highest electrons density and electrophiles the region(s) of lowest density, and the resulting interactions present different and complementary directionalities. The electron density is also anisotropically distributed around Group 16-14 elements forming covalent π-bonds. [4] Electron density can be remarkably thinned out above, and below, the π-bond plane; a region of positive electrostatic potential, sometimes denoted as the π-hole, is associated with these areas, and nucleophilic sites attractively interact with them This behavior mirrors the well-established ability of unsaturated atoms to work as nucleophiles.

 Figure 1. Partial ball and stick representation of the two-dimensional network that chalcogen bonds (black dashed lines) form in the crystal of tellurium dicyanide (Refcode FEGBID). Color code: grey, carbon; blue, nitrogen; orange, tellurium.

Figure 1. Partial ball and stick representation of the two-dimensional network that chalcogen bonds (black dashed lines) form in the crystal of tellurium dicyanide (Refcode FEGBID). Color code: grey, carbon; blue, nitrogen; orange, tellurium.

 Figure 2. Partial representation of the infinite chains formed by pnictogen bonds in crystalline cyanodimethylarsine (A, Refcode CNMARS) and by tetrel bonds in crystalline dimethylsilicon dicyanide (B, Refcode DMCYSI) and dimethylgermanium dicyanide (C, Refcode DMCYGE). Color code: grey, carbon; blue, nitrogen; violet, arsenic; yellow, silicon; dark green, germanium.

Figure 2. Partial representation of the infinite chains formed by pnictogen bonds in crystalline cyanodimethylarsine (A, Refcode CNMARS) and by tetrel bonds in crystalline dimethylsilicon dicyanide (B, Refcode DMCYSI) and dimethylgermanium dicyanide (C, Refcode DMCYGE). Color code: grey, carbon; blue, nitrogen; violet, arsenic; yellow, silicon; dark green, germanium.

Experimental results have given forceful indications of the ability of Group 16-14 elements to work as electrophiles much earlier than the above-described model was developed. NMR techniques have afforded useful information, [5] but X-ray crystallography has been particularly effective in identifying the studied interactions. The solid-state structures of mono- and poly-cyanides of elements of Groups 16-14 give extensive and consistent examples of chalcogen, pnictogen, and tetrel bonds. Chalcogen bonds are present in the dicyanide of sulfur, selenium, and tellurium: any chalcogen atom forms two such interactions with two distinct cyano nitrogen atoms, and two-dimensional networks are formed (Figure 1). [6]

In P(CN)3, all three cyano groups participate in short contact with phosphorous. Analogous interactions are present in all three As(CH3)n(CN)3-n (n = 0-2) derivatives. [7] Tetrel(CH3)2(CN)2 (Tetrel = Si, Ge, Sn) show quite directional tetrel bonds (Figure 2) and a similar behavior is presented by trimethylcyano analogues. [8]

The project will be advertised in major symposia and conferences relevant to related fields (e.g., the International Conference on the Chemistry of Selenium and Tellurium, the International Conference on Phosphorous Chemistry, and the International Symposium on Organic Chemistry of Sulfur). A kick-off meeting of the Project will be organized in Milan (Italy) early in 2017.

For more information and comments, contact Task Group Chairs Pierangelo Metrangolo <> and Giuseppe Resnati <>.

www.iupac.org/project/2016-001-2-300

References

1. G. Cavallo, P. Metrangolo, T. Pilati, G. Resnati, G. Terraneo, Cryst. Growth Des., 14:2697 (2014).10.1021/cg5001717Search in Google Scholar

2. H. Wang, W. Wang, W. J. Jin, Chem. Rev. 116:5072 (2016).10.1021/acs.chemrev.5b00527Search in Google Scholar PubMed

3. P. Politzer, J. S. Murray, T. Clark, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 15:11178 (2013); J. S. Murray, P. Lane, T. Clark, P. Politzer. J. Mol. Model. 13:1033–1038 (2007).Search in Google Scholar

4. V. de Paul, N. Nziko, S. Scheiner, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 18:3581 (2016).10.1039/C5CP07545ASearch in Google Scholar PubMed

5. S. A. Southern, D. L. Bryce, J. Phys. Chem. A, 119:11891 (2015).10.1021/acs.jpca.5b10848Search in Google Scholar PubMed

6. T. M. Klapotke, B. Krumm, J. C. G. Ruiz, H. Noth, I. Schwab, Eur. J. Inorg. Chem. 4764, (2004). 10.1002/ejic.200400763Search in Google Scholar

7. N. Camerman, J. Trotter. Can. J. Chem. 41:460 (1963): P. Avalle, R. K.Harris, H. Hanika-Heidl, R. D. Fischer, Solid State Sci. 6:1069 (2004); E. O.Schlemper, D. Britton, Acta Crystallogr. 20:777, (1966).Search in Google Scholar

8. J. Konnert, D. Britton, Y. M. Chow, Acta Crystallogr., Sect. B: Struct. Crystallogr. Cryst. Chem. 28:180 (1972).10.1107/S0567740872002043Search in Google Scholar

Online erschienen: 2016-12-16
Erschienen im Druck: 2016-12-1

©2016 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Masthead - Full issue pdf
  2. Contents
  3. Vice-President’s Column
  4. IUPAC— Holding the International Chemistry Family Together
  5. Stamps International
  6. Reaching Out for the Sun
  7. Features
  8. IChO-48—An Extraordinary Olympiad of Chemistry
  9. SAICM Science Sector and IUPAC Activities
  10. The Solar Army
  11. IUPAC Wire
  12. Chemistry International Goes Seasonal
  13. Future of the Chemical Sciences
  14. IUPAC 2017 Distinguished Women in Chemistry or Chemical EngineeringCall for Nominations
  15. 2017 IUPAC-Solvay International Award For Young Chemists
  16. IUPAC100 Logo Competition
  17. UNESCO/PhosAgro/IUPAC Green Chemistry for Life Program
  18. Hanwha Total IUPAC Young Scientist Award 2016
  19. DSM Materials Sciences Award 2016 Goes to Professor Steven P. Armes
  20. WANTED: A Home for an Orphaned Chemical Database
  21. Project Place
  22. Identifying International Chemical Identifier (InChI) Enhancements—QR Codes and Industry Applications
  23. Categorizing Chalcogen, Pnictogen, and Tetrel Bonds, and Other Interactions Involving Groups 14-16 Elements
  24. Standardization of Electrical Energy Per Order (EEO) Reporting for UV/H2O2 Reactors
  25. Isotopes Matter
  26. Materials on the Nanoscale—Uniform Description System Version 2.0
  27. Making an imPACt
  28. How to Name New Chemical Elements (IUPAC Recommendations 2016)
  29. Vocabulary of Concepts and Terms in Chemometrics (IUPAC Recommendations 2016)
  30. Glossary of Terms Used in Extraction (IUPAC Recommendations 2016)
  31. Extraction for Analytical Scale Sample Preparation (IUPAC Technical Report)
  32. Review of Footnotes and Annotations to the 1949–2013 Tables of Standard Atomic Weights and Tables of Isotopic Compositions of the Elements (IUPAC Technical Report)
  33. Guidelines for Measurement of Luminescence Spectra and Quantum Yields of Inorganic and Organometallic Compounds in Solution and Solid State (IUPAC Technical Report)
  34. Bookworm
  35. Storing Energy, with Special Reference to Renewable Energy Sources
  36. Chemistry Beyond Chlorine
  37. POLYCHAR 23—World Forum on Advanced Materials
  38. Macromolecular Complexes Part I and II
  39. Polymer-Solvent Complexes and Intercalates POLYSOLVAT-10
  40. A Draft Framework for Understanding SDG Interactions
  41. Up for Discussion
  42. Is it possible to extend the Cahn-Ingold-Prelog priority rules to supramolecular structures and coordination compounds using lone pairs?
  43. Preliminary Property Design for Ionic Solids and Liquids
  44. Conference Call
  45. New Chemistries for Phytomedicines and Crop Protection Chemicals
  46. Science: How Close to Open?
  47. Chemical Safety and Security in a Rapidly Changing World
  48. POLYCHAR 24 World Forum Advanced Materials
  49. Polymers and Organic Chemistry (POC-16)
  50. Phosphorus Chemistry
  51. Where 2B & Y
  52. Solutions for Drug-Resistant Infections
  53. Macro- and Supramolecular Architectures and Materials
  54. Colloquium Spectroscopicum Internationale
  55. Introduction to the World of Chemical Data—an OnLine College Course (OLCC) on Cheminformatics
  56. Chemical Identifier
  57. Digital Cultural Heritage
  58. 16th International Meeting on Boron Chemistry (IMEBORON16)
  59. Mark Your Calendar
  60. Index 2016
Downloaded on 25.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/ci-2016-0617/html
Scroll to top button