We carried out Hartree-Fock (HF) and density functional theory calculations for 61 compounds, the conjugated bases of carboxylic acids, phenols, and alcohols, and analyzed their acid-base behavior using molecular orbital (MO) energies and their dependence on solvent effects. Despite the well-known correlation between highest-occupied MO (HOMO) energies and pKa, we observed that HOMO energies are inadequate to describe the acid-base behavior of these compounds. Therefore, we established a criterion to identify the best frontier MO for describing pKa values and also to understand why the HOMO approach fails. The MO that fits our criterion provided very good correlations with pKa values, much better than those obtained by HOMO energies. Since they are the frontier molecular orbitals that drive the acid-base reactions in each compound, they were called frontier effective-for-reaction MOs, or FERMOs. By use of the FERMO concept, the reactions that are HOMO driven, and those that are not, can be better explained, independently from the calculation method used, as both HF and Kohn-Sham methodologies lead to the same FERMO.
The present study shows that a hydrogen bond between the OH group and the fluorine atom is not involved in the (1h)J(FH) spin-spin coupling transmission either for 4-bromo-2-fluorophenol or 2-fluorophenol. In fact, according to a quantum theory of atoms in molecules analysis, no bond critical point is found between O-H and F moieties. The nature of the transmission mechanism of the Fermi contact term of the (1h)J(FH) spin-spin coupling is studied by analyzing canonical molecular orbitals (see J. Phys. Chem. A 2010, 114, 1044), and it is observed that virtual orbitals play only a quite minor role in its transmission. This is typical of a Fermi contact term transmitted mainly through exchange interactions owing to the overlap of proximate electronic clouds; therefore, it is suggested to identify them as (nTS)J(FH) coupling where n stands for the number of formal bonds separating the coupling nuclei. In the cases studied in this work is n = 4. Results presented in this work could provide an interesting rationalization for different experimental signs known in the current literature for proximate J(FH) couplings.
Emissions of greenhouse gases due to human activities have been well documented as well as the effects on global warming resulting from it. Efforts to reduce greenhouse gases at the source are crucial to curb climate change, but due to insignificant economic incentives to reduce usage of fossil fuels, not a lot of progress has been made by this route. This necessitates additional measures to reduce the occurrence of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Here we used theoretical methods to study the solubility of carbon dioxide in ionic liquids (ILs) since sequestration of CO2 in ILs has been proposed as a possible technology for reducing the emissions of CO2 to the atmosphere. Ionic liquids form a class of solvents with melting temperatures below 100 °C and, due to very low vapor pressures, which are not volatile. We have performed molecular dynamics (MD) simulations of 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium (C2mim) bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide (Tf2N) and its mixtures with carbon dioxide in order to investigate the CO2 concentration effect on the CO2-cation and CO2-anion interactions. A systematic investigation of CO2 concentration effects on resulting equilibrium liquid structure, and the local environment of the ions is provided. The Quantum Theory of Atoms in Molecules (QTAIM) was used to determine the interaction energy for CO2-cation and CO2-anion complexes from uncorrelated structures derived from MD simulations. A spatial distribution function analysis demonstrates the specific interactions between CO2 and the ionic liquid. Our findings indicate that the total volume of the system increases with the CO2 concentration, with a molar volume of CO2 of about 0.038 L/mol, corresponding to liquid CO2 under a pressure of 100 bar. In other words, the IL effectively pressurizes the CO2 inside its matrix. The thermodynamics of CO2 solvation in C2 min-Tf2N were computed using free energy techniques, and the solubility of CO2 is found to be higher in this IL (-3.7 ± 1 kcal/mol) than in water (+0.2 kJ/mol), predominantly due to anion-CO2 interactions.
We have analyzed the structure and stability of archetypal pnictogen-bonded model complexes D3Pn•••A- (Pn = N, P, As, Sb; D, A = F, Cl, Br) using state-of-the-art relativistic density functional...
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