A new computational tool for interpreting the infrared spectra of molecular complexes
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The popularity of infrared (IR) spectroscopy is due to its high interpretive power. This study presents a new computational tool for analyzing the IR spectra of molecular complexes in terms of intermolecular interaction energy components. In particular, the proposed scheme enables associating the changes in the IR spectra occurring upon complex formation with individual types of intermolecular interactions (electrostatic, exchange, induction, and dispersion), thus providing a completely new insight into the relations between the spectral features and the nature of interactions in molecular complexes. To demonstrate its interpretive power, we analyze, for selected vibrational modes, which interaction types rule the IR intensity changes upon the formation of two different types of complexes, namely pi···pi stacked (benzene···1,3,5-trifluorobenzene) and hydrogen-bonded (HCN···HNC) systems. The exemplary applications of the new scheme to these two molecular complexes revealed that the interplay of interaction energy components governing their stability might be very different from that behind the IR intensity changes. For example, in the case of the dispersion-bound pi···pi-type complex, dispersion contributions to the interaction-induced IR intensity of the selected modes are notably smaller than their first-order (electrostatic and exchange) counterparts
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