15 research outputs found
Simulations Suggest Possible Triply Bonded Phosphorusā”E13 Molecules (E13Ā =Ā B, Al, Ga, In, and Tl)
The effect of substitution on the potential energy surfaces of RE13Ā ā°Ā PR (E13Ā =Ā B, Al, Ga, In, Tl; RĀ =Ā F, OH, H, CH3, SiH3, SiMe(SitBu3)2, SiiPrDis2, Tbt, and Ar* is studied using density functional theory (M06-2X/Def2-TZVP, B3PW91/Def2-TZVP and B3LYP/LANL2DZĀ +Ā dp). The theoretical results demonstrate that all triply bonded RE13Ā ā°Ā PR compounds with small substituents are unstable and spontaneously rearrange to other doubly bonded isomers. That is, the smaller groups, such as RĀ ćĀ F, OH, H, CH3 and SiH3, neither kinetically nor thermodynamically stabilize the triply bonded RE13Ā ā°Ā PR compounds. However, the triply bonded RāE13ā°PRĀ“ molecules, possessing bulkier substituents (RĀ“Ā =Ā SiMe(SitBu3)2, SiiPrDis2, Tbt and Ar*), are found to have a global minimum on the singlet potential energy surface. In particular, the bonding character of the RāE13ā°PRĀ“ species is well defined by the valence-electron bonding model (model [II]). That is to say, RāE13ā°PRĀ“ molecules that feature groups are regarded as Rā²-E13P-Rā². The theoretical evidence shows that both the electronic and the steric effects of bulkier substituent groups play a prominent role in rendering triply bonded Rā²E13ā°PRā² species synthetically accessible and isolable in a stable form
The Triply Bonded Alā°Sb Molecules: A Theoretical Prediction
The effect of substitution on the potential energy surfaces of RAlā°SbR (RĀ =Ā F, OH, H, CH3, SiH3, SiMe(SitBu3)2, SiiPrDis2, Tbt, and Ar*) is investigated using density functional theories (M06-2X/Def2-TZVP, B3PW91/Def2-TZVP, and B3LYP/LANL2DZĀ +Ā dp). The theoretical results demonstrated that all the triply bonded RAlā°SbR compounds with small substituents are unstable and can spontaneously rearrange to other doubly bonded isomers. That is, the smaller groups, such as RĀ =Ā F, OH, H, CH3 and SiH3, neither kinetically nor thermodynamically stabilize the triply bonded RAlā°SbR compounds. However, the triply bonded RāAlā°SbRĀ“ molecules that feature bulkier substituents (RĀ“Ā =Ā SiMe(SitBu3)2, SiiPrDis2, Tbt, and Ar*) are found to possess the global minimum on the singlet potential energy surface and are both kinetically and thermodynamically stable. In particular, the bonding characters of the RāAlā°SbRĀ“ species agree well with the valence-electron bonding model (model) as well as several theoretical analyses (the natural bond orbital, the natural resonance theory, and the charge decomposition analysis). That is to say, RāAlā°SbRĀ“ molecules that feature groups are regarded as Rā²āAl
SbāRā². Their theoretical evidence shows that both the electronic and the steric effects of bulkier substituent groups play a decisive role in making triply bonded Rā²Alā°SbRā² species synthetically accessible and isolable in a stable form
The Mechanisms for the Oxidative Addition of Imidazolium Salts to a Group 9 Transition Metal Atom (Co0, Rh0, and Ir0) and a Group 10 Transition Metal Atom (Ni0, Pd0, and Pt0): A Theoretical Study
The potential energy surfaces of the oxidative addition reactions, L2M + imidazoliumcation ā product and CpMā²L + imidazolium cation ā product (M = Ni, Pd, Pt; Mā² = Co, Rh, Ir; Cp = Ī·5-C5H5; L = 1,3-aryl-N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC), aryl = 2,4,6-trimethylphenyl), are studied at the M06-L/Def2-SVP level of theory. The theoretical findings show that the singlet-triplet splitting (āEst = Etriplet ā Esinglet) for the L2M and CpMā²L species can be used to predict the reactivity for their oxidative additions. That is to say, current theoretical evidence suggests that both a 14-electron L2M complex and a 16-electron CpMā²Lcomplex with a better electron-donating ligand L (such as NHC) result in a reduced āEst value and facilitate the oxidative addition to the saturated CāH bond. The theoretical results for this study are in good agreement with the obtainable experimental results and allow a number of predictions to be made
The Effect of Substituent on Molecules That Contain a Triple Bond Between Arsenic and Group 13 Elements: Theoretical Designs and Characterizations
The effect of substitution on the potential energy surfaces of RE13ā”AsR (E13 = group 13 elements; R = F, OH, H, CH3, and SiH3) is determined using density functional theory (M06ā2X/Def2āTZVP, B3PW91/Def2āTZVP, and B3LYP/LANL2DZ+dp). The computational studies demonstrate that all triply bonded RE13ā”AsR species prefer to adopt a bent geometry that is consistent with the valence electron model. The theoretical studies also demonstrate that RE13ā”AsR molecules with smaller substituents are kinetically unstable, with respect to the intramolecular rearrangements. However, triply bonded Rā²E13ā”AsRā² species with bulkier substituents (Rā² = SiMe(SitBu3)2, SiiPrDis2, and NHC) are found to occupy the lowest minimum on the singlet potential energy surface, and they are both kinetically and thermodynamically stable. That is to say, the electronic and steric effects of bulky substituents play an important role in making molecules that feature an E13ā”As triple bond as viable synthetic target
Triple Bonds between Bismuth and Group 13 Elements: Theoretical Designs and Characterization
The effect of substitution on the potential energy surfaces of RE13ā”BiR (E13 = B, Al, Ga, In, and Tl; R = F, OH, H, CH3, SiH3, Tbt, Ar*, SiMe(SitBu3)2, and SiiPrDis2) is investigated using density functional theories (M06-2X/Def2-TZVP, B3PW91/Def2-TZVP, and B3LYP/LANL2DZ+dp). The theoretical results suggest that all of the triply bonded RE13ā”BiR molecules prefer to adopt a bent geometry (i.e., ā RE13Bi ā 180Ā° and ā E13BiR ā 90Ā°), which agrees well with the bonding model (model (B)). It is also demonstrated that the smaller groups, such as R = F, OH, H, CH3, and SiH3, neither kinetically nor thermodynamically stabilize the triply bonded RE13ā”BiR compounds, except for the case of H3SiBā”BiSiH3. Nevertheless, the triply bonded RŹ¹E13ā”BiRŹ¹ molecules that feature bulkier substituents (RŹ¹ = Tbt, Ar*, SiMe(SitBu3)2, and SiiPrDis2) are found to have the global minimum on the singlet potential energy surface and are both kinetically and thermodynamically stable. In other words, both the electronic and the steric effects of bulkier substituent groups play an important role in making triply bonded RE13ā”BiR (Group 13āGroup 15) species synthetically accessible and isolable in a stable form
Substituent Effects on the Stability of Thallium and Phosphorus Triple Bonds: A Density Functional Study
Three computational methods (M06-2X/Def2-TZVP, B3PW91/Def2-TZVP and B3LYP/LANL2DZ+dp) were used to study the effect of substitution on the potential energy surfaces of RTlā”PR (R = F, OH, H, CH3, SiH3, SiMe(SitBu3)2, SiiPrDis2, Tbt (=C6H2-2,4,6-(CH(SiMe3)2)3), and Ar* (=C6H3-2,6-(C6H2-2, 4,6-i-Pr3)2)). The theoretical results show that these triply bonded RTlā”PR compounds have a preference for a bent geometry (i.e., ā Rā¼Tlā¼P ā 180Ā° and ā Tlā¼Pā¼R ā 120Ā°). Two valence bond models are used to interpret the bonding character of the Tlā”P triple bond. One is model [I], which is best described as TlP. This interprets the bonding conditions for RTlā”PR molecules that feature small ligands. The other is model [II], which is best represented as TlP. This explains the bonding character of RTlā”PR molecules that feature large substituents. Irrespective of the types of substituents used for the RTlā”PR species, the theoretical investigations (based on the natural bond orbital, the natural resonance theory, and the charge decomposition analysis) demonstrate that their Tlā”P triple bonds are very weak. However, the theoretical results predict that only bulkier substituents greatly stabilize the triply bonded RTlā”PR species, from the kinetic viewpoint
IndiumāArsenic Molecules with an Inī¼As Triple Bond: A Theoretical Approach
The effect of substitution on the
potential energy surfaces of
RInī¼AsR (R = F, OH, H, CH<sub>3</sub>, and SiH<sub>3</sub> and
Rā² = SiMeĀ(Si<i>t</i>Bu<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>,
Si<i>i</i>PrDis<sub>2</sub>, and <i>N</i>-heterocyclic
carbene (NHC)) is determined using density functional theory calculations
(M06-2X/Def2-TZVP, B3PW91/Def2-TZVP, and B3LYP/LANL2DZ+dp). The computational
studies demonstrate that all of the triply bonded RInī¼AsR species
prefer to adopt a bent geometry, which is consistent with the valence
electron model. The theoretical studies show that RInī¼AsR molecules
that have smaller substituents are kinetically unstable with respect
to their intramolecular rearrangements. However, triply bonded Rā²Inī¼AsRā²
species that have bulkier substituents (Rā² = SiMeĀ(Si<i>t</i>Bu<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>, Si<i>i</i>PrDis<sub>2</sub>, and NHC) occupy minima on the singlet potential energy surface,
and they are both kinetically and thermodynamically stable. That is,
the electronic and steric effects of bulky substituents play an important
role in making molecules that feature an Inī¼As triple bond
viable as a synthetic target. Moreover, two valence bond models are
used to interpret the bonding character of the Inī¼As triple
bond. One is model [A], which is best represented as . This interprets the bonding
conditions for RInī¼AsR molecules that feature small ligands.
The other is model [B], which is best represented as . This explains the bonding
character of RInī¼PAsR molecules that feature large substituents
Triply Bonded Galliumī¼Phosphorus Molecules: Theoretical Designs and Characterization
The effect of substitution on the
potential energy surfaces of triple-bonded RGaī¼PR (R = F, OH,
H, CH<sub>3</sub>, SiH<sub>3</sub>, SiMeĀ(Si<i>t</i>Bu<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>, Si<i>i</i>PrDis<sub>2</sub>, Tbt
(C<sub>6</sub>H<sub>2</sub>-2,4,6-{CHĀ(SiMe<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>}<sub>3</sub>), and Ar* (C<sub>6</sub>H<sub>3</sub>-2,6-(C<sub>6</sub>H<sub>2</sub>-2,4,6-<i>i</i>-Pr<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>)) compounds was theoretically examined by using density functional
theory (i.e., M06-2X/Def2-TZVP, B3PW91/Def2-TZVP, and B3LYP/LANL2DZ+dp).
The theoretical evidence strongly suggests that all of the triple-bonded
RGaī¼PR species prefer to select a bent form with an angle (ā GaāPāR)
of about 90Ā°. Moreover, the theoretical observations indicate
that only the bulkier substituents, in particular, for the strong
donating groups (e.g., SiMeĀ(Si<i>t</i>Bu<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub> and Si<i>i</i>PrDis<sub>2</sub>) can efficiently
stabilize the Gaī¼P triple bond. In addition, the bonding analyses
(based on the natural bond orbital, the natural resonance theory,
and the charge decomposition analysis) reveal that the bonding characters
of such triple-bonded RGaī¼PR molecules should be regarded as Rā²Gaī»āPRā². In other words, the Gaī¼P triple bond involves one traditional
Ļ bond, one traditional Ļ bond, and one donorāacceptor
Ļ bond. Accordingly, the theoretical conclusions strongly suggest
that the Gaī¼P triple bond in such acetylene analogues (RGaī¼PR)
should be very weak
Triple-Bonded Boronī¼Phosphorus Molecule: Is That Possible?
The effect of substitution on the
potential energy surfaces of
RBī¼PR (R = H, F, OH, SiH<sub>3</sub>, and CH<sub>3</sub>) is
studied using density functional theories (M06-2X/Def2-TZVP, B3PW91/Def2-TZVP,
and B3LYP/LANL2DZ+dp). There is significant theoretical evidence that
RBī¼PR compounds with smaller substituents are fleeting intermediates,
so they would be difficult to be detected experimentally. These theoretical
studies using the M06-2X/Def2-TZVP method demonstrate that only the
triply bonded Rā²Bī¼PRā² molecules bearing sterically
bulky groups (Rā² = Tbt (=C<sub>6</sub>H<sub>2</sub>-2,4,6-{CHĀ(SiMe<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>}<sub>3</sub>), SiMeĀ(Si<i>t</i>Bu<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>, Ar* (=C<sub>6</sub>H<sub>3</sub>-2,6-(C<sub>6</sub>H<sub>2</sub>-2,4,6-<i>i</i>-Pr<sub>3</sub>)<sub>2</sub>), and Si<i>i</i>PrDis<sub>2</sub>) are significantly
stabilized and can be isolated experimentally. Using the simple valence-electron
bonding model and some sophisticated theories, the bonding character
of Rā²Bī¼PRā² should be viewed as Rā²BI PRā². The present
theoretical observations indicate that both the electronic and the
steric effect of bulkier substituent ligands play a key role in making
triply bonded Rā²Bī¼PRā² species synthetically accessible
and isolable in a stable form