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ABSTRACT: 5-(Nitromethyl)-3-phenyl-4,5-dihydroisoxazole was obtained as a product of a high-yielding [3 + 2] cycloaddition reaction of in situ-generated benzonitrile N-oxide and 3-nitroprop-1-ene. For the first time, the regiochemistry of this reaction was unambiguously proven by X-ray structural analysis. The quantum-chemical calculation performed at the M06-2X/6-31G(d) (PCM) theoretical level affords a basis for explaining the course of reaction as well as the nature of transition states. Next, further DFT calculations together with spectral data shed light on structural aspects of the product.
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Ensembles of quantum trajectories are evolved to study time-dependent reaction dynamics in multidimensional systems with up to 25 vibrational modes. The equations of motion are formulated in curvilinear reaction path coordinates and all coupling terms are retained, including those involving curvature of the reaction path. The model potential is a Gaussian barrier along the translational coordinate coupled to M vibrational modes. Spatial derivatives needed to propagate the trajectories are evaluated by least squares fitting in a contracted basis set. Stable propagation of the trajectory ensembles was carried out until complete bifurcation into reflected and reactive subensembles. The reaction probabilities were evaluated by Monte Carlo integration of the multidimensional smooth transmitted densities. Computational results, including trajectory plots and time-dependent reaction probabilities, are presented for M = 1, 5, and 25 vibrational modes.
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The dynamics of ensembles containing thousands of quantum trajectories are studied for multidimensional systems undergoing reactive scattering. The Hamiltonian and equations of motion are formulated in curvilinear reaction path coordinates, for the case of a planar (zero-torsion) reaction path. In order to enhance the computational efficiency, an improved least squares fitting procedure is introduced. This scheme involves contracted basis sets and the use of inner and outer stencils around points where fitting is performed. This method is applied to reactive systems with 50-200 harmonic vibrational modes which are coupled to motion along the reaction coordinate. Dynamical results, including trajectory evolution and time-dependent reaction probabilities, are presented and power law scaling of computation time with the number of vibrational modes is described.
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The reactive scattering of a wave packet is studied by the quantum trajectory method for a model system with up to 25 Morse vibrational modes. The equations of motion are formulated in curvilinear reaction path coordinates with the restriction to a planar reaction path. Spatial derivatives are evaluated by the least squares method using contracted basis sets. Dynamical results, including trajectory evolution and time-dependent reaction probabilities, are presented and analyzed. For the case of one Morse vibrational mode, the results are in good agreement with those derived through direct numerical integration of the time-dependent Schrodinger equation.
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A conceptually simple approach, the covering function method (CFM), is developed to cope with the node problem in the hydrodynamic formulation of quantum mechanics. As nodes begin to form in a scattering wave packet (detected by a monitor function), a nodeless covering wave function is added to it yielding a total function that is also nodeless. Both local and global choices for the covering function are described. The total and covering functions are then propagated separately in the hydrodynamic picture. At a later time, the actual wave function is recovered from the two propagated functions. The results obtained for Eckart barrier scattering in one dimension are in excellent agreement with exact results, even for very long propagation times t=1.2 ps. The capability of the CFM is also demonstrated for multidimensional propagation of a vibrationally excited wave packet.