Using simple functionals of the electron density to appreciate and quantify molecular structure and chemical reactivity properties is a recent endeavor in density functional theory (DFT) toward the development of a new chemical reactivity theory. According to the first Hohenberg–Kohn theorem in DFT, the electron density alone should be able to determine any property in the ground state. Exchange and correlation energies are such properties, so are molecular structure and chemical reactivity, and hence they all should accurately be determined by electron density functionals. Quantities such as Shannon entropy, Fisher information, Ghosh–Berkowitz–Parr entropy, information gain, Onicescu information energy, etc., from the information‐theoretic approach are simple electron density functionals, whose analytical forms are exactly known. In this article, we demonstrate their usefulness and validity to quantify regioselectivity, stereoselectivity, and other structure and reactivity properties. We will outline the current understanding of its theoretical framework at first, and then highlight recent applications to chemical problems including isomeric and conformational stability, electrophilicity and nucleophilicity, strong covalent and weak noncovalent interactions, acidity and basicity, aromaticity and antiaromaticity, and numerous other properties. The effort of employing electron density functionals to quantify chemical concepts should open up a new door for us to ultimately develop a chemical reactivity theory using the DFT language.
This article is characterized under:
Structure and Mechanism > Reaction Mechanisms and Catalysis
Electronic Structure Theory > Density Functional Theory
Structure and Mechanism > Molecular Structures
Molecular and Statistical Mechanics > Molecular Interactions
Molecular
systems bound together through noncovalent interactions
are ubiquitous in nature, many of which are involved in essential
life processes, yet little is known about the principles governing
their structure, stability, and function. Cooperativity as one of
the intrinsic properties in these systems plays a key role. In this
work, on the basis of our recent quantification scheme of the cooperativity
effect, we present a general pattern to identify which systems are
positively cooperative and which are negatively cooperative. We show
that cooperativity in homogeneous molecular systems is positive, but
cooperativity in charged molecular systems is negative. We also employ
analytical tools from energetics and information perspectives to appreciate
the origin of the cooperativity effect. We find that positive cooperativity
is dominated by the exchange–correlation interaction and steric
effect, whereas negative cooperativity is governed by the electrostatic
interaction. Our results should have strong implications for better
understanding molecular recognition, protein folding, signal transduction,
allosteric regulation, and other processes.
How to accurately predict electronic properties of a Columbic system with the electron density obtained from experiments such as X-ray crystallography is still an unresolved problem. The information-theoretic approach recently developed in the framework of density functional reactivity theory is one of the efforts to address the issue. In this work, using 27 atoms and 41 molecules as illustrative examples, we present a study to demonstrate that one is able to satisfactorily describe such electronic properties as the total energy and its components with information-theoretic quantities like Shannon entropy, Fisher information, Ghosh-Berkowitz-Parr entropy, and Onicescu information energy. Closely related to the earlier attempt of expanding density functionals using simple homogeneous functionals, this work not only confirms Nagy's proof that Shannon entropy alone should contain all the information needed to adequately describe an electronic system but also provides a feasible pathway to map the relationship between the experimentally available electron density and various electronic properties for Columbic systems such as atoms and molecules. Extensions to other electronic properties are straightforward.
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