Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.112, No.25, 5712-5719, 2008
High-stability hydrogenated silicon-carbon clusters: A full study of Si2C2H2 in comparison to Si2C2, C2B2H4, and other similar species
The structural and electronic characteristics of the Si2C2H2 and Si2C2 clusters are studied by ab initio calculations based on coupled cluster and density functional theory using the hybrid B3LYP functional. In addition, similar species, such as SiC2H2 and Si3C2H2, are also studied for comparison. It is illustrated that the lowest energy structures of all three hydrogenated clusters, which have the general form Si-n(CH)(2), n = 1, 2, 3, are fully analogous to the structures of the corresponding organometallic isovalent carboranes. The most stable structure Of Si2C2H2 is obtained by attaching two hydrogens onto the carbon atoms of a higher energy (+1.5 eV) planar trapezoidal structure Of Si2C2, followed by geometry optimization which leads to puckering of the planar structure. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that Si2C2H2 and the other two "similar" hydrogenated clusters are much more stable than the corresponding bare nonhydrogenated clusters. Comparison Of Si2C2H2 and C2B2H4 shows that their structural and bonding similarity includes also nuclear rearrangement similarity. The two species are isomerizable with an energy difference between their lowest energy puckered 1,2- and 1,3-isomers of about +/- 0.3 eV. It is suggested that SiC2H2, Si2C2H2, and Si3C2H2 are special cases of a larger class of stable clusters. It is speculated on the basis of the calculated infrared spectrum that Si2C2H2 and perhaps other members of this class of clusters could be found in appreciable abundance in interstellar space.