Abstract:
The homodimers of singly fluorine-substituted phenylacetylenes were investigated using electronic and vibrational spectroscopic methods in combination with density functional theory calculations. The IR spectra in the acetylenic C-H stretching region show a marginal red shift for the dimers relative to the monomers. Further, the marginal red shifts indicate that the acetylenic group in all the dimers is minimally perturbed relative to the corresponding monomer. The observed spectra were assigned to a set of ?-stacked structures within an energy range of 1.5 kJ mol-1, which differ in the relative orientation of the two monomers on the basis of M06-2X/aug-cc-pVTZ level calculation. The observed red shift in the acetylenic C-H stretching vibration of the dimers suggests that the antiparallel structures contribute predominantly based on a simple coupled dipole model. Energy decomposition analysis using symmetry-adapted perturbation theory indicates that dispersion plays a pivotal role in ?-? stacking with appreciable contribution of electrostatics. The stabilization energies of fluorophenylacetylene dimers follow the same ordering as their dipole moments, which suggests that dipole moment enhances the ability to form ?-stacked structures.