The
halogen bond occurs when there is evidence of a net attractive
interaction between an electrophilic region associated with a halogen
atom in a molecular entity and a nucleophilic region in another, or
the same, molecular entity. In this fairly extensive review, after
a brief history of the interaction, we will provide the reader with
a snapshot of where the research on the halogen bond is now, and,
perhaps, where it is going. The specific advantages brought up by
a design based on the use of the halogen bond will be demonstrated
in quite different fields spanning from material sciences to biomolecular
recognition and drug design.
Halogen bonding is the noncovalent interaction where halogen atoms function as electrophilic species. The energetic and geometrical features of the interaction are described along with the atomic characteristics that confer molecules with the specific ability to interact through this interaction. Halogen bonding has an impact on all research fields where the control of intermolecular recognition and self-assembly processes plays a key role. Some principles are presented for crystal engineering based on halogen-bonding interactions. The potential of the interaction is also shown by applications in liquid crystals, magnetic and conducting materials, and biological systems.
This recommendation proposes a definition for the term “chalcogen bond”; it is recommended the term is used to designate the specific subset of inter- and intramolecular interactions formed by chalcogen atoms wherein the Group 16 element is the electrophilic site.
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