82 research outputs found
The atomic orbitals of the topological atom
The effective atomic orbitals have been realized in the framework of Baderâs atoms in molecules theory for a general wavefunction. This formalism can be used to retrieve from any type of calculation a
proper set of orthonormalized numerical atomic orbitals, with occupation numbers that sum up to the
respective Quantum Theory of Atoms in Molecules (QTAIM) atomic populations. Experience shows
that only a limited number of effective atomic orbitals exhibit signiïŹcant occupation numbers. These
correspond to atomic hybrids that closely resemble the core and valence shells of the atom. The
occupation numbers of the remaining effective orbitals are almost negligible, except for atoms with
hypervalent character. In addition, the molecular orbitals of a calculation can be exactly expressed
as a linear combination of this orthonormalized set of numerical atomic orbitals, and the Mulliken
population analysis carried out on this basis set exactly reproduces the original QTAIM atomic populations of the atoms. Approximate expansion of the molecular orbitals over a much reduced set of
orthogonal atomic basis functions can also be accomplished to a very good accuracy with a singular
value decomposition procedure
Spin-coupled description of aromaticity in the retro DielsâAlder reaction of norbornene
The electronic rearrangements along the lowest-energy path for the gas-phase retro DielsâAlder reaction of norbornene are monitored using spin-coupled theory. We find that the most dramatic changes to the electronic structure occur in a relatively narrow interval in which the system passes through a geometry at which it can be considered to be significantly aromatic. We provide an estimate of the vertical resonance energy. Our results are consistent with the anticipated synchronous âaromaticâ nature of this reaction, but we find that the key changes occur a little before the actual transition state is reached
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