Photoelectron spectroscopy and theoretical studies of anion–π interactions: binding strength and anion specificity†
Abstract
Proposed in theory and then their existence confirmed, anion–π interactions have been recognized as new and important non-covalent binding forces. Despite extensive theoretical studies, numerous crystal structural identifications, and a plethora of solution phase investigations, anion–π interaction strengths that are free from complications of condensed-phase environments have not been directly measured in the gas phase. Herein we present a joint photoelectron spectroscopic and theoretical study on this subject, in which tetraoxacalix[2]arene[2]triazine 1, an electron-deficient and cavity self-tunable macrocyclic, was used as a charge-neutral molecular host to probe its interactions with a series of anions with distinctly different shapes and charge states (spherical halides Cl−, Br−, I−, linear thiocyanate SCN−, trigonal planar nitrate NO3−, pyramidic iodate IO3−, and tetrahedral sulfate SO42−). The binding energies of the resultant gaseous 1 : 1 complexes (1·Cl−, 1·Br−, 1·I−, 1·SCN−, 1·NO3−, 1·IO3− and 1·SO42−) were directly measured experimentally, exhibiting substantial non-covalent interactions with pronounced anion-specific effects. The binding strengths of Cl−, NO3−, IO3− with 1 are found to be strongest among all singly charged anions, amounting to ca. 30 kcal mol−1, but only about 40% of that between 1 and SO42−. Quantum chemical calculations reveal that all the anions reside in the center of the cavity of 1 with an anion–π binding motif in the complexes' optimized structures, where 1 is seen to be able to self-regulate its cavity structure to accommodate anions of different geometries and three-dimensional shapes. Electron density surface and charge distribution analyses further support anion–π binding formation. The calculated binding energies of the anions and 1 nicely reproduce the experimentally estimated electron binding energy increase. This work illustrates that size-selective photoelectron spectroscopy combined with theoretical calculations represents a powerful technique to probe anion–π interactions and has potential to provide quantitative guest–host molecular binding strengths and unravel fundamental insights in specific anion recognitions.