Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.102, No.1, 128-137, 1998
An experimental and theoretical study of jet-cooled complexes of chiral molecules: The role of dispersive forces in chiral discrimination
Isomer formation in dimeric complexes of a chiral naphthalene derivative (2-naphthyl-1-ethanol) with nonchiral or chiral primary and secondary alcohols (n-propanol, 2-methyl-1-butanol, 2-butanol, 2-pentanol) has been studied by hole-burning spectroscopy, Besides the spectroscopic discrimination between the homochiral and heterochiral complexes, previously observed in the fluorescence excitation spectra, ground-state depletion experiments have shown that each diastereoisomer is cooled in the jet in several isomeric forms. To get information on the structures of the complexes and on the influence of the solvent conformations of these structures, semiempirical calculations that rely on the exchange perturbation method have been performed. It has been shown that the most stable complexes involve a I-I-bond between the chromophore acting as the donor and the solvent and that they involve anti and gauche conformations of the solvent. The binding energy of the complexes results from a subtle balance between electrostatic and dispersive forces: the complexes involving the gauche and anti conformers of the solvent differ from each other by the amount of dispersion energy relative to the total interaction energy. The increase in the dispersive forces calculated for the complexes with the anti conformers has been related to a larger red shift of the absorption spectrum and is suggested to play a role in the observed chiral discrimination.