RESUMEN
Fulminic acid (HCNO) played a critical role in the early development of organic chemistry, and chemists have sought to discern the structure and characteristics of this molecule and its isomers for over 200 years. The mercurial nature of the extremely flat H-C-N bending potential of fulminic acid, with a nearly vanishing harmonic vibrational frequency at linearity, remains enigmatic and refractory to electronic structure theory, as dramatic variation with both orbital basis set and electron correlation method is witnessed. To solve this problem using rigorous electronic wavefunction methods, we have employed focal point analyses (FPA) to ascertain the ab initio limit of optimized linear and bent geometries, corresponding vibrational frequencies, and the HCN + O(3P) â HCNO reaction energy. Electron correlation treatments as extensive as CCSDT(Q), CCSDTQ(P), and even CCSDTQP(H) were employed, and complete basis set (CBS) extrapolations were performed using the cc-pCVXZ (X = 4-6) basis sets. Core electron correlation, scalar relativistic effects (MVD1), and diagonal Born-Oppenheimer corrections (DBOC) were all included and found to contribute significantly in determining whether vibrationless HCNO is linear or bent. At the all-electron (AE) CCSD(T)/CBS level, HCNO is a linear molecule with ω5(H-C-N bend) = 120 cm-1. However, composite AE-CCSDT(Q)/CBS computations give an imaginary frequency (51i cm-1) at the linear optimized geometry, leading to an equilibrium structure with an H-C-N angle of 173.9°. Finally, at the AE-CCSDTQ(P)/CBS level, HCNO is once again linear with ω5 = 45 cm-1, and inclusion of both MVD1 and DBOC effects yields ω5 = 32 cm-1. A host of other topics has also been investigated for fulminic acid, including the dependence of re and ωi predictions on a variety of CBS extrapolation formulas, the question of multireference character, the N-O bond energy and enthalpy of formation, and issues that give rise to the quasibent appellation.
RESUMEN
This study systematically examines the interactions of the tetrafluoroborate anion (BF4-) with up to four water molecules (BF4-(H2O)n=1,2,3,4). Full geometry optimizations and subsequent harmonic vibrational frequency computations are performed using a variety of density functional theory (DFT) methods (B3LYP, B3LYP-D3BJ, and M06-2X) and the MP2 ab initio method with a triple-ζ correlation consistent basis set augmented with diffuse functions on all non-hydrogen atoms (cc-pVTZ for H and aug-cc-pVTZ for B, O, and F; denoted as haTZ). Optimized structures and harmonic vibrational frequencies were also obtained with the CCSD(T) ab initio method and the haTZ basis set for the mono- and dihydrate (n = 1, 2) structures. The 2-body:Many-body (2b:Mb) technique, in which CCSD(T) computations capture the 1- and 2-body contributions to the interactions and MP2 computations recover all higher-order contributions, was used to extend these demanding computations to the tri- and tetrahydrate (n = 3, 4) systems. Four, five, and eight new stationary points have been identified for the di-, tri-, and tetrahydrate systems, respectively. The global minimum of the monohydrate adopts a symmetric double ionic hydrogen bond motif with C2v symmetry and an electronic dissociation energy of 13.17 kcal mol-1 at the CCSD(T)/haTZ level of theory. This strong solvent···solute interaction, however, competes with solute···solute interactions in the lowest-energy BF4-(H2O)n=2,3,4 minima that are not seen in the other di-, tri-, or tetrahydrate minima. The latter interactions help increase the 2b:Mb dissociation energies to more than 26, 41, and 51 kcal mol-1 for n = 2, 3, and 4, respectively. Structures that form hydrogen bonds between the solvating water molecules also exhibit the largest shifts in the harmonic OH stretching frequencies for the waters of hydration. These shifts can exceed -280 cm-1 relative to an isolated H2O molecule at the 2b:Mb/haTZ level of theory.
RESUMEN
This work addresses the pathological behavior of the energetics of dimethyl sulfoxide and related sulfur-containing compounds by providing the computational benchmark energetics of R2E2 species, where R = H/CH3 and E = O/S, with bent and pyramidal geometries using state-of-the-art methodologies. These 22 geometries were fully characterized with coupled-cluster with single, double, and perturbative triple excitations [CCSD(T)], second-order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory (MP2), and 22 density functional theory (DFT) methods with 8, 12, and 12, respectively, correlation consistent basis sets of double-, triple-, or quadruple-ζ quality. The relative energetics were determined at the MP2 and CCSD(T) complete basis set (CBS) limits using 17 basis sets up to sextuple-ζ and include augmented, tight-d, and core-valence correlation consistent basis sets. The relative energies of oxygen-/sulfur-containing compounds exhibit exceptionally slow convergence to the CBS limit with canonical methods as well as significant basis set dependence. CCSD(T) with quadruple-ζ basis sets can give qualitatively incorrect relative energies. Explicitly correlated MP2-F12 and CCSD(T)-F12 methods dramatically accelerate the convergence of the relative energies to the CBS limit for these problematic compounds. The F12 methods with a triple-ζ quality basis set give relative energies that deviate no more than 0.41 kcal mol-1 from the benchmark CBS limit. The correlation consistent Composite Approach (ccCA), ccCA-TM (TM for transition metals), and G3B3 deviated by no more than 2 kcal mol-1 from the benchmark CBS limits. Relative energies for oxygen-/sulfur-containing systems fully characterized with DFT are quite unreliable even with triple-ζ quality basis sets, and 13 out of 45 combinations fortuitously give a relative energy that is within 1 kcal mol-1 on average from the benchmark CCSD(T) CBS limit for these systems.
RESUMEN
The ethynyl radical, C2H, is found in a variety of different environments ranging from interstellar space and planetary atmospheres to playing an important role in the combustion of various alkynes under fuel-rich conditions. Hydrogen-atom abstraction reactions are common for the ethynyl radical in these contrasting environments. In this study, the C2H + HX â C2H2 + X, where HX = HNCO, trans-HONO, cis-HONO, C2H4, and CH3OH, reactions have been investigated at rigorously high levels of theory, including CCSD(T)-F12a/cc-pVTZ-F12. For the stationary points thus located, much higher levels of theory have been used, with basis sets as large as aug-cc-pV5Z and methods up to CCSDT(Q), and core correlation was also included. These molecules were chosen because they can be found in either interstellar or combustion environments. Various additive energy corrections have been included to converge the relative enthalpies of the stationary points to subchemical accuracy (≤0.5 kcal mol-1). Barriers predicted here (2.19 kcal mol-1 for the HNCO reaction and 0.47 kcal mol-1 for C2H4) are significantly lower than previous predictions. Reliable kinetics were acquired over a wide range of temperatures (50-5000 K), which may be useful for future experimental studies of these reactions.