This report present the results of natural energy decomposition analysis (NEDA), natural bond orbital (NBO), and quantum theory of atoms in molecules (QTAIM) calculations of three derivatives of biphenyl-1-aza-18-crown-6 ether and their 1:1 complexes with Cd(2+). All calculations used the B3LYP density functional theory in combination with the 6-311G and WTBS basis sets for ligands and Cd(2+) ion, respectively. Ligands 1 and 3 have a single 1-aza-18-crown-6, substituent; ligand 2 has two such substituents. The results show that, in the optimized geometries of the complexes, the distance between N and Cd(2+) is greater than the distance between O and Cd(2+). NBO and QTAIM data confirm these results. There was no stabilization energy or bond critical point for N · · · Cd(2+) in NBO or QTAIM, respectively. Data show that the O · · · Cd(2+) interaction is a kind of closed shell interaction. The trend of the calculated stabilization energy was similar to the experimental data. Different contributions of interaction energies for complex formation were analyzed by NEDA, and the results show that the main component of the interactions is accounted for by polarization.
Density functional theory calculations on two glycosides, namely, n-octyl-β-D-glucopyranoside (C(8)O-β-Glc) and n-octyl-β-D-galactopyranoside (C(8)O-β-Gal) were performed for geometry optimization at the B3LYP/6-31G level. Both molecules are stereoisomers (epimers) differing only in the orientation of the hydroxyl group at the C4 position. Thus it is interesting to investigate electronically the effect of the direction (axial/equatorial) of the hydroxyl group at the C4 position. The structure parameters of X-H∙∙∙Y intramolecular hydrogen bonds were analyzed, while the nature of these bonds and the intramolecular interactions were considered using the atoms in molecules (AIM) approach. Natural bond orbital analysis (NBO) was used to determine bond orders, charge and lone pair electrons on each atom and effective non-bonding interactions. We have also reported electronic energy and dipole moment in gas and solution phases. Further, the electronic properties such as the highest occupied molecular orbital, lowest unoccupied molecular orbital, ionization energy, electron affinity, electronic chemical potential, chemical hardness, softness and electrophilicity index, are also presented here for both C(8)O-β-Glc and C(8)O-β-Gal. These results show that, while C(8)O-β-Glc possess- only one hydrogen bond, C(8)O-β-Gal has two intramolecular hydrogen bonds, which further confirms the anomalous stability of the latter in self-assembly phenomena.