Abstract

By means of first principle calculations we have investigated a set of molecules that are presumed to contain carbon-sulfur triple bonds, namely HCSOH, H(3)SCH, cis-FCSF, F(3)CCSF(3), and F(5)SCSF(3). For HCSOH, FCSF, and H(3)SCH we used the CCSD(T) methodology and the correlation-consistent basis sets. On the other hand, F(3)CCSF(3) and F(5)SCSF(3) were studied at the B3LYP, M06-2X, MP2, and G3 levels of theory. We found that none of these molecules display a carbon-sulfur adiabatic bond dissociation energy (ABDE) as strong as diatomic CS (170.5 kcal mol(-1)), or a diabatic bond dissociation energy (DBDE) larger than the one found in SCO (212.0 kcal mol(-1)), although the DBDE of FCSF comes quite close at 208.3 kcal mol(-1). The CS ABDEs of F(3)CCSF(3), F(5)SCSF(3), and H(3)SCH are comparable to that of a single C-S bond. In contrast with the experimental results, F(3)CCSF(3) and F(5)SCSF(3) are predicted to be linear with C(3v) and C(s) symmetry, respectively, at the B3LYP/6-311+G(3df,2p) level. MP2/6-311+G(2df,2p) calculations support the C(3v) symmetry for F(3)CCSF(3), despite F(5)SCSF(3) not having a perfect linear structure; the CSC angle is 174.6°, which is nearly 20° larger than the experimental value. The analysis of the carbene structures of HCSOH and H(3)SCH revealed that they are not significant, because the triplet state is dissociative in these cases. However, for F(3)CCSF(3) and F(5)SCSF(3) , the carbene triplet states lie 0.81 and 0.77 eV above the singlet state, respectively. In the same vein, our investigation supports the presence of a strong double bond for HCSOH. The conflicting evidence available for F(3)CCSF(3) and F(5)SCSF(3) makes it very difficult to determine the nature of the CS bonds. However, the bond dissociation energies and the singlet-triplet splittings clearly suggest that these compounds should be considered as masked sulfinylcarbenes. The analysis of the bond dissociation energies challenges the existence of a triple bond in these five molecules, but from a strictly thermodynamic standpoint, cis-FCSF is found to be the candidate most likely to exhibit triple-bond character.

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