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American Chemical Society, The Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 42(115), p. 11876-11888, 2011

DOI: 10.1021/jp207593s

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Structural and thermodynamic characterization of polyphenylbenzenes

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

The thermodynamic and structural study of a series of polyphenylbenzenes, from benzene, n(Ph) = 0, to hexaphenylbenzene, n(Ph) = 6, is presented. The available literature data for this group of compounds was extended by the determination of the relevant thermodynamic properties for 1,2,4-triphenylbenzene, 1,2,4,5-tetraphenylbenzene, and hexaphenylbenzene, as well as structural determination by X-ray crystallography for some of the studied compounds. Gas phase energetics in this class of compounds was analyzed from the derived standard molar enthalpies of formation in the gaseous phase. The torsional profiles relative to the phenyl-phenyl hindered rotations in some selected polyphenylbenzenes, as well as the gas phase structures and energetics, were derived from quantum chemical calculations. In the ideal gas phase, a significant enthalpic destabilization was observed in hexaphenylbenzene relative to the other polyphenylbenzenes, due to steric crowding between the six phenyl substituents. A relatively low enthalpy of sublimation was observed for hexaphenylbenzene, in agreement with the decreased surface area able to establish intermolecular interactions. The apparently anomalous low entropy of sublimation observed for hexaphenylbenzene is explained by its high molecular symmetry and the six highly hindered phenyl internal rotations. For the series of polyphenylbenzenes considered, it was shown that the differentiation in the entropy of sublimation can be chiefly ascribed to the torsional freedom of the phenyl substituents in the gas phase and the entropy terms related with molecular symmetry.