6533b852fe1ef96bd12ab8e4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

New insights in chemical reactivity from quantum chemical topology.

Julien PilméPaul Fleurat-lessardJohanna Klein

subject

Water dimerQuantum Chemical TopologyMaterials science010304 chemical physicsHydrogen bondIntermolecular forceGeneral ChemistryInteraction energy010402 general chemistryTopology01 natural scienceselectrophile0104 chemical sciencesComputational Mathematicselectron localization functionIntramolecular force0103 physical sciences[CHIM]Chemical SciencesMoleculeChemical ReactivityFrontier Molecular Orbital Theory[INFO]Computer Science [cs]Reactivity (chemistry)nucleophileTopology (chemistry)

description

International audience; Based on the quantum chemical topology of the modified electron localization function ELFx, an efficient and robust mechanistic methodology designed to identify the favorable reaction pathway between two reactants is proposed. We first recall and reshape how the supermolecular interaction energy can be evaluated from only three distinct terms, namely the intermolecular coulomb energy, the intermolecular exchange‐correlation energy and the intramolecular energies of reactants. Thereafter, we show that the reactivity between the reactants is driven by the first‐order variation in the coulomb intermolecular energy defined in terms of the response to changes in the number of electrons. Illustrative examples with the formation of the dative bond B‐N involved in the BH3NH3 molecule and the typical formation of the hydrogen bond in the canonical water dimer are presented. For these selected systems, our approach unveils a noticeable mimicking of Edual onto the DFT intermolecular interaction energy surface calculated between the both reactants. An automated reaction‐path algorithm aimed to determine the most favorable relative orientations when the two molecules approach each other is also outlined.

10.1002/jcc.26504https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33660292