International
Tables for Crystallography Volume C Mathematical, physical and chemical tables Edited by E. Prince © International Union of Crystallography 2006 |
International Tables for Crystallography (2006). Vol. C. ch. 9.5, p. 794
Section 9.5.4. Discussion |
It should be remembered that this table has been derived from the organic section of CSD. We are aware that a number of organic bond types which occur very frequently in organometallics and metal complexes (e.g. CC in cyclopentadienyl, C—P in triphenylphosphine, etc.) are either absent or poorly represented in this work. These omissions are rectified in Chapter 9.6 . We also note that certain bond types listed here (e.g. As—O, Si—O, Si—N, etc.) will occur with greater frequency in inorganic compounds. The interested reader is referred to the Inorganic Crystal Structure Database (Bergerhoff, Hundt, Sievers & Brown, 1983) for a machine-readable compendium of more relevant structural data.
The tabulation given here represents the first stage in a major project designed to obtain the average geometries of function groups, rigid rings, and the low-energy conformations of flexible rings. Details of mean bond lengths, valence angles, and conformational preferences in a wide range of substructures will form the basis of a machine-readable `fragment library' for use in molecular modelling and other areas of research. The systematic survey will be extended to derive information about distances, angles, directionality, and environmental dependence of hydrogen bonds and non-bonded interactions.
References
Bergerhoff, G., Hundt, R., Sievers, R. & Brown, I. D. (1983). The Inorganic Crystal Structure Database. J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci. 23, 66–70.Google Scholar