The thermodynamic stability of dichromium carbonyls is investigated with density functional theory (DFT).
The results demonstrate why [(μ-H)Cr2(CO)10]- has been observed while the Cr2(CO)11 and (μ-H)2Cr2(CO)9
structures remain unknown. The related structure [(μ-H)2Cr2(CO)8]2- is predicted to be stable with respect to
its fragments and isolable. Homoleptic chromium carbonyl structures of the formula Cr2(CO)11 appear to be
thermodynamically unstable with respect to dissociation to the fragments Cr(CO)6 and Cr(CO)5 and only
slightly metastable with respect to the transition state leading to these dissociated fragments. The potential
energy surface in the region adjacent to these minima appears to be very flat. In contrast, both the BP86 and
B3LYP functionals predict the known [(μ-H)Cr2(CO)10]- to have significant stability with respect to the
fragments Cr(CO)5 + [Cr(CO)5H]-. For the B3LYP functional, the dissociation energy is 41 kcal/mol, while
for BP86 it is 43 kcal/mol. A notable structural difference for [(μ-H)Cr2(CO)10]- between the two theoretical
methods is that the BP86 functional predicts the Cr−H−Cr angle to be 147° while the B3LYP functional
predicts a linear geometry (180°). Experimental structures of [(μ-H)Cr2(CO)10]- determined by neutron
diffraction and by X-ray crystallography display a remarkably similar ambiguity in the Cr−H−Cr angle.
Certain other differences between the B3LYP and BP86 functionals are observed in the predicted geometries,
numbers of imaginary vibrational frequencies, and particular energy differences. Several subtle comparisons
suggest that the BP86 method is preferable to B3LYP for this particular class of compounds.