Quantum mechanical tunneling of atoms is increasingly found to play an important role in many chemical transformations. Experimentally, atom tunneling can be indirectly detected by temperature-independent rate constants at low temperature or by enhanced kinetic isotope effects. In contrast, the influence of tunneling on the reaction rates can be monitored directly through computational investigations. The tunnel effect, for example, changes reaction paths and branching ratios, enables chemical reactions in an astrochemical environment that would be impossible by thermal transition, and influences biochemical processes.
OH radicals play a key role as an intermediate in the water formation chemistry of the interstellar medium. For example the reaction of OH radicals with H 2 molecules is among the final steps in the astrochemical reaction network starting from O, O 2 , and O 3 . Experimentally it was shown that even at 10 K this reaction occurs on ice surfaces. As the reaction has a high activation energy only atom tunneling can explain such experimental findings.In this study we calculated reaction rate constants for the title reaction on a water-ice I h surface. To our knowledge, low-temperature rate constants on a surface are not available in the literature. All surface calculations were done using a QM/MM framework (BHLYP/TIP3P) after a thorough benchmark of different density functionals and basis sets to highly accurate correlation methods. Reaction rate constants are obtained using instanton theory which takes atom tunneling into account inherently, with constants down to 110 K for the Eley-Rideal mechanism and down to 60 K for the Langmuir-Hinshelwood mechanism. We found that the reaction is nearly temperature independent below 80 K. We give kinetic isotope effects for all possible deuteration patterns for both reaction mechanisms. For the implementation in astrochemical networks, we also give fit parameters to a modified Arrhenius equation. Finally, several different binding sites and binding energies of OH radicals on the I h surface are discussed and the corresponding rate constants are compared to the gas-phase case.
The first synthetic protocol to high oxidation state molybdenum(VI) N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) alkylidyne complexes (NHC=1,3-diisopropylimidazol-2-ylidene, 1,3-dimethyl-4,5-R -imidazol-2-ylidene, R =H, Cl, CN) is reported. Steric limitations of the NHCs and the benzylidyne are described. All novel complexes were characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction and solution NMR techniques. It was shown that all complexes presented here show activity in the self-metathesis of 1-phenyl-1-propyne at room temperature. To identify mechanistic differences, an experimental sequence to detect dissociation of ligands was developed. Results reveal dissociation of less electron-donating NHCs in course of the reaction. Mechanistic and reactivity differences were attributed to electronic and steric effects through Tolman's electronic parameter and the percentage of buried volume. Furthermore, Mo-1 containing the 1,3-dimethylimidazol-2-ylidene ligand showed good activity in self-metathesis reactions of p-substituted 1-phenyl-1-propynes with electron-donating moieties at room temperature.
Dynamic effects are an important determinant of chemical reactivity and selectivity, but the deliberate manipulation of atomic motions during a chemical transformation is not straightforward. Here, we demonstrate that extrinsic force exerted upon cyclobutanes by stretching pendant polymer chains influences product selectivity through force-imparted nonstatistical dynamic effects on the stepwise ring-opening reaction. The high product stereoselectivity is quantified by carbon-13 labeling and shown to depend on external force, reactant stereochemistry, and intermediate stability. Computational modeling and simulations show that, besides altering energy barriers, the mechanical force activates reactive intramolecular motions nonstatistically, setting up “flyby trajectories” that advance directly to product without isomerization excursions. A mechanistic model incorporating nonstatistical dynamic effects accounts for isomer-dependent mechanochemical stereoselectivity.
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