Abstract
The distribution of distances from atoms of a particular element E to a probe atom X (oxygen in most cases), both bonded and intermolecular non-bonded contacts, has been analyzed. In general, the distribution is characterized by a maximum at short E⋯X distances corresponding to chemical bonds, followed by a range of unpopulated distances – the van der Waals gap – and a second maximum at longer distances – the van der Waals peak – superimposed on a random distribution function that roughly follows a d3 dependence. The analysis of more than five million interatomic “non-bonded” distances has led to the proposal of a consistent set of van der Waals radii for most naturally occurring elements, and its applicability to other element pairs has been tested for a set of more than three million data, all of them compared to over one million bond distances. © 2013 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
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CITATION STYLE
Alvarez, S. (2013). A cartography of the van der Waals territories. Journal of the Chemical Society. Dalton Transactions, 42(24), 8617–8636. https://doi.org/10.1039/c3dt50599e
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