Recent
advances in synthetic methodologies have opened new strategies
for synthesizing stable metal-free electron spin systems based on
fullerenes. Introducing nitric oxide (NO) inside a fullerene cage
is one of the methods to attain this goal. In the present study, dispersion
corrected density functional theory (B3LYP-D3) has been used to evaluate
the structure, stability, and electronic properties of NO encapsulated
fullerene NO@C60 and compared those with its exohedral
fullerene NO.C60 analog. The calculated stabilization energy
for NO@C60 is appreciably higher than NO.C60, and this difference is comprehended via the Quantum theory of atoms
in molecules (QTAIM) and noncovalent interaction (NCI) topological analyses. The delocalization
of electron density of NO and the C60 cage in NO@C60 is discussed using electrostatic potential analysis. In
addition, an attempt has been made to understand the different locations
and orientations involving the interaction of two NO radicals and
the fullerene C60. It is shown that the encapsulation of
the NO dimer inside the C60 cage is an energetically unfavorable
process. On the other hand, stable structures are obtained upon the
physisorption of other NO on the surface of NO@C60 and
NO.C60. The present work provides an in-depth understanding
of the interaction of NO and C60 fullerene, its preferable
position, and its orientation in both endohedral and exohedral complexes.