2 research outputs found

    Theoretical predictions of isotope effects versus their experimental values for an example of uncatalyzed hydrolysis of atrazine

    Get PDF
    Kinetic isotope effects are one of the most powerful experimental techniques for establishing the nature of a chemical process. However their interpretation very often seeks support from electronic structure calculations in order to get detailed information regarding the transition state which is not experimentally available. For an example of atrazine hydrolysis we have shown how the match between experimentally and theoretically determined magnitudes of carbon, nitrogen and chlorine kinetic isotope effects can be used to discuss the mechanism under different reaction conditions. Two different density functionals combined with the explicit presence of solvent molecules and a continuum solvation model revealed that although the reaction proceeds via the same concerted mechanism regardless of the reaction conditions the transition state structure for an acid and base-catalyzed pathway is different

    Role of Microsolvation and Quantum Effects in the Accurate Prediction of Kinetic Isotope Effects: The Case of Hydrogen Atom Abstraction in Ethanol by Atomic Hydrogen in Aqueous Solution

    Get PDF
    Hydrogen abstraction from ethanol by atomic hydrogen in aqueous solution is studied using two theoretical approaches: the multipath variational transition state theory (MP-VTST) and a path-integral formalism in combination with free-energy perturbation and umbrella sampling (PI-FEP/UM). The performance of the models is compared to experimental values of H kinetic isotope effects (KIE). Solvation models used in this study ranged from purely implicit, via mixed鈥搈icrosolvation treated quantum mechanically via the density functional theory (DFT) to fully explicit representation of the solvent, which was incorporated using a combined quantum mechanical-molecular mechanical (QM/MM) potential. The effects of the transition state conformation and the position of microsolvating water molecules interacting with the solute on the KIE are discussed. The KIEs are in good agreement with experiment when MP-VTST is used together with a model that includes microsolvation of the polar part of ethanol by five or six water molecules, emphasizing the importance of explicit solvation in KIE calculations. Both, MP-VTST and PI-FEP/UM enable detailed characterization of nuclear quantum effects accompanying the hydrogen atom transfer reaction in aqueous solutionThis work was partially supported by the National Science Center in Poland (Sonata BIS grant UMO-2014/14/E/ST4/00041) and in part by PLGrid Infrastructure (Poland). S.K. acknowledges the Erasmus+ programme within which his 3-month project conducted at the University of Santiago de Compostela was possible. A.F-.R. thanks the Conseller铆a de Cultura, Educaci贸n e Ordenaci贸n Universitaria (Axuda para Consolidaci贸n e Estructuraci贸n de unidades de investigaci贸n competitivas do Sistema Universitario de Galicia, Xunta de Galicia ED431C 2017/17 & Centro singular de investigaci贸n de Galicia acreditaci贸n 2016-2019, ED431G/09) and the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF). D.F-.C. also thanks Xunta de Galicia for financial support through a postdoctoral grantS
    corecore