Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.127, No.42, 14841-14848, 2005
Van der Waals complexes of polar aromatic molecules: Unexpected structures for dimers of azulene
Full geometry optimizations at the dispersion corrected DFT-BLYP/TZV2P level of theory have been performed for dinners of azulene that may serve as a model system for the van der Waals complexes of polar,7 systems. The structures and binding energies for 11 dimers are investigated in detail. The DFT-D interaction energies have been successfully checked against results from the accurate SCS-MP2/aug-ccpVTZ approach. Out of the nine investigated stacked complexes, eight have binding energies larger than 7.4 kcal/mol (SCS-MP2) that exceed the value of 7.1 kcal/mol for the best naphthalene dinner. T-shaped arrangements (CH(...)pi) are significantly less stable. Two out of the three best structures have an antiparallel alignment of the monomer dipole moments in the complex, although the best ones with a parallel orientation are only about 0.5 kcal/mol less strongly bound which points to a minor importance of dipole-dipole interactions to binding. Quite surprisingly, the energetically lowest structure (Delta E = -9.2 kcal/mol) corresponds to a situation where the two seven-membered rings are located almost on top of each other (7-7) and the long molecular axes are rotated against each other by 130 degrees. The 7-7 structural motif is found also in other energetically low-lying structures, and the expected 5-7 (two-side) arrangement is less strongly bound by about 2 kcal/mol. This can be explained by the electrostatic potential of azulene that only partially reflects the charge separation according to the common 4n + 2 pi electron rule. General rules for predicting stable van der Waals complexes of polar pi systems are discussed.