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The 1-Naphthol Dimer and Its Surprising Preference for π-π Stacking over Hydrogen Bonding.

Using chirped-pulse Fourier transform microwave spectroscopy, we have experimentally identified the most abundant dimer of an alcohol analogue of naphthalene, 1-naphthol. The 1-naphthol dimer features a V-shaped, partially overlapping π-π stacked structure with no canonical hydrogen bonds between the subunits. This structural assignment is in contradiction to an earlier study of the 1-naphthol dimer using UV-IR dip double resonance spectroscopy in the O-H stretch region, which assigns a π-stacked but also canonically hydrogen bonded structure. We use an improved theoretical analysis to resolve this discrepancy and show that the new, V-shaped structure is also consistent with the previously measured UV-IR data. These new computational and spectroscopic results shed light on the complicated nature of evaluating energetics and structures for larger, dispersion-bound systems.

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