Abstract

For the first time, the structures and energies for the hydrogen bonding of a 1:1 complex formed between formamide and methanol molecules have been computed with various pure and hybrid density functional theory (DFT) and ab initio methods at varied basis set levels from 6-31g to 6-31+g(d,p). Five reasonable geometries on the potential energy surface of methanol and formamide system are considered and their relative stability is discussed. The infrared (IR) spectrum frequencies, IR intensities, and vibrational frequency shifts are reported. From the systematic studies, it is found that all the DFT methods selected here correctly compute the dimerization energies and geometries, with the B3P86 method predicting the hydrogen bond lengths relatively shorter and BPW91 yielding the interaction energies relatively lower. Finally, the solvent effects on the geometries of the formamide–methanol complexes have also been investigated using self-consistent reaction field (SCRF) calculations with five different DFT methods at the 6-31+g(d,p) basis set level. The results indicate that the polarity of the solvent has played an important role on the structures and relative stabilities of different isomers. Moreover, the basis set superposition error correction is critical to the interaction energies in the polar solvents. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Quantum Chem, 2004

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