We propose a new scale of group electronegativities, derived from benzene ring deformations in Ph−X
molecules. A recent analysis of such deformations (Campanelli, A. R.; Domenicano, A.; Ramondo, F. J.
Phys. Chem. A
2003, 107, 6429) has shown that two orthogonal linear combinations of the internal ring
angles, termed S
E and S
R, are directly related to the electronegativity and resonance effects of the substituent,
respectively. In the present paper, we show that S
E increases linearly with the electronegativity of X within
each of the first two rows of the periodic table, acting as a sensitive indicator of the polarity of the Ph−X
bond. By using S
E values from ab initio quantum chemical calculations, we have derived the electronegativities
of 100 organic and inorganic groups. Nonbonded interactions with the ortho hydrogens and carbons may
fictitiously alter the electronegativity of a group; in most cases, however, they are easily eluded by changing
the conformation of the substituent with respect to the benzene ring. Although the atom directly linked to the
ring tends to dominate the electronegativity of a group, the role of its adjacent atoms is also important. Their
effect depends markedly on the nature of chemical bonding and electron density distribution within the group.
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