Catacondensed Chemical Hexagonal Complexes: A Natural Generalisation of Benzenoids
Cate S. Anst\"oter, Nino Ba\v{s}i\'c, Patrick W. Fowler and, Toma\v{z} Pisanski

TL;DR
This paper introduces the concept of catacondensed chemical hexagonal complexes (CCHC) as a natural extension of benzenoids, exploring their mathematical properties, counting perfect matchings, and assessing their chemical stability through quantum calculations.
Contribution
It defines CCHC as a new class of polygonal complexes, proves they are Kekulean, and evaluates their potential stability using quantum chemical methods.
Findings
All CCHC are Kekulean structures.
Formulas for counting perfect matchings in CCHC are provided.
Quantum calculations suggest CCHC structures are plausible stable molecules.
Abstract
Catacondensed benzenoids (those benzenoids having no carbon atom belonging to three hexagonal rings) form the simplest class of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH). They have a long history of study and are of wide chemical importance. In this paper, mathematical possibilities for natural extension of the notion of a catacondensed benzenoid are discussed, leading under plausible chemically and physically motivated restrictions to the notion of a catacondensed chemical hexagonal complex (CCHC). A general polygonal complex is a topological structure composed of polygons that are glued together along certain edges. A polygonal complex is flat if none of its edges belong to more than two polygons. A connected flat polygonal complex determines an orientable or nonorientable surface, possibly with boundary. A CCHC is then a connected flat polygonal complex all of whose polygons are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGraph theory and applications · Synthesis and Properties of Aromatic Compounds · Computational Drug Discovery Methods
