Towards an atomistic understanding of polymorphism in molecular solids

Understanding and controlling polymorphism in molecular solids is a major unsolved problem in crystal engineering. While the ability to calculate accurate lattice energies with atomistic modelling provides valuable insight into the associated energy scales, existing methods cannot connect energy dif...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP 2022-05, Vol.24 (18), p.11278-11294
Hauptverfasser: la Vega, Arturo Sauza-de, Duarte, Leonardo J, Silva, Arnaldo F, Skelton, Jonathan M, Rocha-Rinza, Tomás, Popelier, Paul L. A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Understanding and controlling polymorphism in molecular solids is a major unsolved problem in crystal engineering. While the ability to calculate accurate lattice energies with atomistic modelling provides valuable insight into the associated energy scales, existing methods cannot connect energy differences to the delicate balances of intra- and intermolecular forces that ultimately determine polymorph stability ordering. We report herein a protocol for applying Quantum Chemical Topology (QCT) to study the key intra- and intermolecular interactions in molecular solids, which we use to compare the three known polymorphs of succinic acid including the recently-discovered γ form. QCT provides a rigorous partitioning of the total energy into contributions associated with topological atoms, and a quantitative and chemically intuitive description of the intra- and intermolecular interactions. The newly-proposed Relative Energy Gradient (REG) method ranks atomistic energy terms (steric, electrostatic and exchange) by their importance in constructing the total energy profile for a chemical process. We find that the conformation of the succinic acid molecule is governed by a balance of large and opposing electrostatic interactions, while the H-bond dimerisation is governed by a combination of electrostatics and sterics. In the solids, an atomistic energy balance emerges that governs the contraction, towards the equilibrium geometry, of a molecular cluster representing the bulk crystal. The protocol we put forward is as general as the capabilities of the underlying quantum-mechanical model and it can provide novel perspectives on polymorphism in a wide range of chemical systems. Quantum topological atoms offer a robust atomic energy partitioning, allowing the crystal engineering to move back from molecule-molecule interactions to atom-atom interactions in order to understand polymorphism.
ISSN:1463-9076
1463-9084
DOI:10.1039/d2cp00457g