Abstract

A well-known method to characterize non-covalent interactions consists in the topological analysis of electron density distribution (EDD) functions, complemented by the search for minima in the reduced density gradient (RDG) distributions. Here, we characterize intermolecular interactions occurring in crystals of benzyl chalcocyanate compounds through bond critical points (BCP) of the promolecular electron density (ED) built from the crystallographic Cromer–Mann parameters, at several smoothing levels t. The trajectories formed by the t-dependent BCP locations are interpreted in terms of the intermolecular interactions occurring within the crystal arrangements. Chalcogen…nitro BCPs are clearly present in the unsmoothed EDDs but are annihilated as t increases, while chalcogen…chalcogen BCPs appear and are among the only BCPs left at the highest smoothing level. The chalcogen bonds are differentiated from the other chalcogen interactions through the linear chalcogen…BCP…nitro geometry at low smoothing level and their more negative Laplacian values. The annihilation of CPs can be followed by the apparition of a RDG minimum, associated with a very weak interaction. Along the BCP trajectories, the Laplacian shows a progressive concentration of the ED in the intermolecular space within the crystals and adopts the most negative values at the shortest atom…atom separations. At the termination point of a BCP trajectory, the drastic increase of the ellipticity value illustrates the flattening of the EDD.

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