Abstract

p-p and CH��� N interactions are vital in bio- logical systems. In this study, stacking and hydrogen- bonded interactions in pyrazine and triazine dimers were investigated by density functional theory combined with symmetry-adapted perturbation theory (DFT-SAPT) and counterpoise (CP)-corrected supermolecular MP2, SCS- MP2, B3LYP-D and CCSD(T) calculations. All interaction energies were computed using the optimized structures at the CP-corrected SCS/aug-cc-pVDZ level, which gave 1-2 kJ/mol lower interaction energies than the ones com- puted at the MP2 level. For both dimers, doubly hydrogen- bonded and cross-(displaced) stacked orientations were found to be the lowest energy ones. The reference CCSD(T) calculations favored the former structure in both dimer systems, whereas MP2 and SCS-MP2 located the latter as the lowest energy isomer. In particular, the former was found to be lower in energy than the latter by 2.28 and 1.01 kJ/mol at the CCSD(T)/aug-cc-pVDZ level for pyra- zine and triazine, respectively. B3LYP-D produced inter- action energies in agreement with the CCSD(T) at the equilibrium geometries, but it overestimates them at the short range and underestimates at the long intermonomer separations. Furthermore, it tends to give smaller equilib- rium distances compared to the CCSD(T). DFT-SAPT method was in a good agreement with the reference CCSD(T) calculations. This suggests that DFT-SAPT can be employed to compute the full potential energy surface of these dimers. Moreover, DFT-SAPT calculations showed that the electrostatic and dispersion contributions are the most important energy components stabilizing these dimers. The present study aims to show which theoretical method is the most promising one for the investigation of intermolecular interactions dominated by p-p and CH��� N. Therefore, the findings obtained in this study can be used to unravel the structures of nucleic acid bases and other sys- tems stabilized by p-p and CH��� N interactions.

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