6533b7d2fe1ef96bd125ecc2

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Relationship between Electron Affinity and Half-Wave Reduction Potential: A Theoretical Study on Cyclic Electron-Acceptor Compounds.

Enrique OrtíJuan AragóJoaquín CalboRafael Viruela

subject

chemistry.chemical_classification010304 chemical physicsChemistryAb initioSolvationElectronElectron acceptor010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesRedoxAtomic and Molecular Physics and Optics0104 chemical sciencesReduction (complexity)Ab initio quantum chemistry methodsComputational chemistryChemical physicsElectron affinity0103 physical sciencesPhysical and Theoretical Chemistry

description

A high-level ab initio protocol to compute accurate electron affinities and half-wave reduction potentials is presented and applied for a series of electron-acceptor compounds with potential interest in organic electronics and redox flow batteries. The comprehensive comparison between the theoretical and experimental electron affinities not only proves the reliability of the theoretical G3(MP2) approach employed but also calls into question certain experimental measurements, which need to be revised. By using the thermodynamic cycle for the one-electron attachment reaction A+e- →A- , theoretical estimates for the first half-wave reduction potential have been computed along the series of electron-acceptor systems investigated, with maximum deviations from experiment of only 0.2 V. The precise inspection of the terms contributing to the half-wave reduction potential shows that the difference in the free energy of solvation between the neutral and the anionic species (ΔΔGsolv ) plays a crucial role in accurately estimating the electron-acceptor properties in solution, and thus it cannot be considered constant even in a family of related compounds. This term, which can be used to explain the occasional lack of correlation between electron affinities and reduction potentials, is rationalized by the (de)localization of the additional electron involved in the reduction process along the π-conjugated chemical structure.

10.1002/cphc.201600778https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27595419