Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.120, No.3, 521-531, 1998
Crystal engineering using the unconventional hydrogen bond. Synthesis, structure, and theoretical investigation of cyclotrigallazane
Cyclotrigallazane, [H2GaNH2](3), was prepared by condensing liquid ammonia onto solid trimethylamine gallane, GaH3(NMe3), at -78 degrees C and allowing the mixture to warm to room temperature and was characterized by IR, mass spectroscopy, elemental analysis, single-crystal X-ray, and neutron powder diffraction. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction at T = -167 degrees C established that the (GaN)(3) ring was in the chair conformation. Neutron powder diffraction data collected at 25 degrees C on the fully deuterated analogue were analyzed with Rietveld refinement to give an average bond distance for Ga-D of 1.56(3) Angstrom and a N-D of 1.04(5) Angstrom. The intermolecular interactions were dominated by four Ga-H ... H-N unconventional hydrogen bonds per molecule that form a chain parallel to the crystallographic a axis. The crystallographically equivalent D ... D bond lengths are 1.97 Angstrom. Calculations revealed that in the gas phase, twist-boat conformations are preferred over chairs for cyclotrigallazane and the related boron and aluminum compounds by 0.9 to 2.6 kcal/mol at correlated levels of electronic structure theory. For cyclotriborazane and cyclotrigallazane, calculations suggest that each H ... H hydrogen bond contributes about 3 kcal/mol to the binding energy (relative to the chair monomer); this value is very slightly higher for cyclotrialumazane.