The
system-specific quantum Rice–Ramsperger–Kassel
(SS-QRRK) theory (
J. Am. Chem. Soc.
2016
,
138
, 2690) is suitable to determine rate constants
below the high-pressure limit. Its current implementation allows incorporating
variational effects, multidimensional tunneling, and multistructural
torsional anharmonicity in rate constant calculations. Master equation
solvers offer a more rigorous approach to compute pressure-dependent
rate constants, but several implementations available in the literature
do not incorporate the aforementioned effects. However, the SS-QRRK
theory coupled with a formulation of the modified strong collision
model underestimates the value of unimolecular pressure-dependent
rate constants in the high-temperature regime for reactions involving
large molecules. This underestimation is a consequence of the definition
for collision efficiency, which is part of the energy transfer model.
Selection of the energy transfer model and its parameters constitutes
a common issue in pressure-dependent calculations. To overcome this
underestimation problem, we evaluated and implemented in a bespoke
Python code two alternative definitions for the collision efficiency
using the SS-QRRK theory and tested their performance by comparing
the pressure-dependent rate constants with the Rice–Ramsperger–Kassel–Marcus/Master
Equation (RRKM/ME) results. The modeled systems were the tautomerization
of propen-2-ol and the decomposition of 1-propyl, 1-butyl, and 1-pentyl
radicals. One of the tested definitions, which Dean et al. explicitly
derived (
Z. Phys. Chem.
2000
,
214
, 1533), corrected the underestimation of the pressure-dependent
rate constants and, in addition, qualitatively reproduced the trend
of RRKM/ME data. Therefore, the used SS-QRRK theory with accurate
definitions for the collision efficiency can yield results that are
in agreement with those from more sophisticated methodologies such
as RRKM/ME.