Context And Results: This study aimed to obtain potential energy curves within a multireference 4-component relativistic method and to present spectroscopic constants (R[Formula: see text],[Formula: see text],[Formula: see text]x[Formula: see text],[Formula: see text]y[Formula: see text], D[Formula: see text], D[Formula: see text], B[Formula: see text],[Formula: see text],[Formula: see text],[Formula: see text] ), accurate extended Rydberg analytical form, and rovibrational levels for the 6 low-lying states of the I[Formula: see text] anion. For these states, some spectroscopic constants, rovibrational levels, and an accurate analytical form are presented for the first time in literature, and they are of interest for femtosecond and dynamics experiments of I[Formula: see text] as well as for electron attachment of I[Formula: see text]. This study suggests that the inclusion of relativistic and correlation effects treated at the MRCISD+Q level is needed to obtain reliable results, specially for D[Formula: see text].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContext And Results: This work aims to study the influence of the absence and presence of permanent charges on the electronic and dynamical properties of the non-covalent bound diatomic systems involving He and Li, Be as neutral and ionic partners. The charge displacement results suggest that in the formation of HeLi[Formula: see text], HeBe[Formula: see text], and HeBe[Formula: see text], the neutral He atom undergoes, in the electric field of the ion, a pronounced electronic polarization, and the natural bond order theoretical approach indicates that in the formation of the molecular orbital He acts as a weak electron donor. The energy decomposition analysis provides the dispersion and induction components as the attractive leading terms controlling the stability of all systems, confirming that the formed bond substantially maintains a non-covalent nature which is also supported by the Quantum Theory of Atoms in Molecules (QTAIM) analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this work, the binding features of adducts formed by a noble gas (Ng = He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, and Rn) atom and the oxygen molecule (O) in its ground Σg-3, in the past target of several experimental studies, have been characterized under different theoretical points of view to clarify fundamental aspects of the intermolecular bond. For the most stable configuration of all Ng-O systems, binding energy has been calculated at the theory's CCSD(T)/aug-cc-pVTZ level and compared with the experimental findings. Rovibrational energies, spectroscopic constants, and lifetime as a function of temperature were also evaluated by adopting properly formulated potential energy curves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, all electron relativistic calculations with 4-component Dirac-Coulomb-Breit (DCB), 4-component Dirac-Coulomb (DC), Dyall's spin-free Dirac-Coulomb (SFDC), exact two-component (X2C) and Levy-Leblond non-relativistic hamiltonians calculations were performed in polyatomic closed shell E121X (X = F, Cl, Br) within density functional theory (DFT) with hybrid functional B3LYP, where E121 is the superheavy element (SHE) with Z = 121. The aims of this study were to investigate relativistic effects in polyatomic E121X (X = F, Cl, Br) and verify the importance of Gaunt effects. The results demonstrate that although the effect of Gaunt interaction is small on change equilibrium bond lengths and bonding, it is important to obtain reliable vibrational frequencies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, the potential energy curves of the ground and the excited states of molecular fluorine anion (F[Formula: see text]) were investigated at multireference configuration interaction (MRCISD) with Davidson size-extensivity correction (denoted as +Q) within fully relativistic four-component relativistic framework including Breit interaction. Spectroscopic constants (R, ω, ωx, ωy, D,D,B, α, β, γ ), accurate extended Rydberg analytical form and rovibrational levels for ground state X:[Formula: see text] are presented, as well as spectroscopic constants for non dissociative excited states. For most states these spectroscopic constants are presented for the first time in literature and they are of interest for experimental studies, specially regarding electron attachment of F.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc
January 2021
The potential energy curves (PECs) of all covalent states of Molecular Astatine (At) have been investigated in this work within a four-component relativistic framework using the MOLFDIR program package. The ground state was determined using multireference configuration interaction with all single and double excitations including Davidson size-extensivity correction (MRCISD+Q) whereas the 22 excited states were treated by complete open shell configuration interaction (COSCI). Spectroscopic constants (R,ω,ωx,ωy, D,B,α,β,T) are presented for all states as well as vertical excitations obtained at COSCI, MRCISD and MRCISD+Q levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough molecular collisions of noble gases (Ng) can be theoretically used to distinguish between the enantiomers of hydrogen peroxide - HO (HP), little is known about the effects of HP-Ng interactions on the chiral rate. In this work, the chiral rate as a function of temperature (CRT) between enantiomeric conformations of HP and Ng (Ng=He, Ne, Ar, Kr, Xe, and Rn) are presented at MP2(full)/aug-cc-pVTZ level of theory through a fully basis set superposition error (BSSE) corrected potential energy surface. The results show that: (a) the CRT is highly affected even at a small decrease in the height of trans-barrier; (b) its smallest values occur with Ne for all temperatures between 100 and 4,000 K; (c) that the decrease of CRT shows an inverse correlation with respect to the average valence electron energy of the Ng and (d) Ne and He may be the noble gases more suitable for study the oriented collision dynamics of HP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis work presents a detailed study concerning the quantum isotope effects on the H+Li[Formula: see text] reaction, when the hydrogen is replaced by muonium, deuterium, and tritium. To verify such effects on these isotope reactions, it was applied an accurate time-independent quantum scattering approach to determine the dynamic properties, such as state-to-state probabilities as a function of the total energy, the product energetic distribution, and the contribution of the ro-vibrational excitation on the reaction probabilities. From the obtained results, it was possible to observe a significant increase on the promotion of the H+Li reaction when hydrogen is replaced by tritium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis investigation generated rovibrational energies and spectroscopic constants for systems of CCl with Ng (Ng = He, Ne, Ar), O, DO and ND from scattering experimental data, and the results presented are of interest for microwave spectroscopy studies of small halogenated molecules. The rovibrational spectra were obtained through two different approaches (Dunham and DVR) within the improved Lennard Jones (ILJ) model. Spectra were also generated within ordinary Lennard Jones and deviations suggest that the ILJ model should be preferred due to interactions beyond dispersion forces presented in these systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aqueous solvation of Th and Np in the IV oxidation state was examined using cluster models generated by Monte Carlo simulations and density functional theory embedded within the COSMO continuum model to approximate the effect of bulk water. Our results suggest that the coordination number (CN) for both Th(IV) and NP(IV) should be 9, in accordance to some experimental and theoretical results from the literature. The structural values for average oxygen-metal distances are within 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe covalent excited states and ground state of the Br2 molecule has been investigated by using four-component relativistic COSCI and MRCISD methods. These methods were performed for all covalent states in the representation Ω((±)). Calculated potential energy curves (PECs) were obtained at the four-component COSCI level, and spectroscopic constants (R(e), D(e), D0, ω(e), ω(e)x(e), ω(e)y(e), B(e), α(e), γ(e), Te, Dv) for bounded states are reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn antioxidant structure-activity study is carried out in this work with ten flavonoid compounds using quantum chemistry calculations with the functional of density theory method. According to the geometry obtained by using the B3LYP/6-31G(d) method, the HOMO, ionization potential, stabilization energies, and spin density distribution showed that the flavonol is the more antioxidant nucleus. The spin density contribution is determinant for the stability of the free radical.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQuantum mechanical calculations at B3LYP/6-31G** level of theory were employed to obtain energy (E), ionization potential (IP), bond dissociation enthalpy (O-H BDE) and stabilization energies (DE(iso)) in order to infer the scavenging activity of dihydrochalcones (DHC) and structurally related compounds. Spin density calculations were also performed for the proposed antioxidant activity mechanism of 2,4,6-trihydroxyacetophenone (2,4,6-THA). The unpaired electron formed by the hydrogen abstraction from the phenolic hydroxyl group of 2,4,6-THA is localized on the phenolic oxygen at 2, 6, and 4 positions, the C₃ and C₆ carbon atoms at ortho positions, and the C₅ carbon atom at para position.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe electronic structure and spectroscopic properties (R(e), omega(e), omega(e)x(e), beta(e), and T(e)) of the ground state and the 22 lowest excited states of chlorine molecule were studied within a four-component relativistic framework using the MOLFDIR program package. The potential energy curves of all possible 23 covalent states were calculated using relativistic complete open shell configuration interaction approach. In addition, four component multireference configuration interaction with single and double excitation calculations were performed in order to infer the effects due to dynamical correlation in vertical excitations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn accurate relativistic universal Gaussian basis set (RUGBS) from H through No without variational prolapse has been developed by employing the Generator Coordinate Dirac-Fock (GCDF) method. The behavior of our RUGBS was tested with two nuclear models: (1) the finite nucleus of uniform proton-charge distribution, and (2) the finite nucleus with a Gaussian proton-charge distribution. The largest error between our Dirac-Fock-Coulomb total energy values and those calculated numerically is 8.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActivation of the carbon dioxide molecule was achieved using bicyclic amidines (DBU, PMDBD, and DBN). The solution reaction of CO(2) with amidines yielded the corresponding zwitterionic complexes through the formation of a N-CO(2) bond. (13)C NMR data confirmed the carbamic nature of the carbamic zwitterions, DBU-CO(2) and PMDBD-CO(2).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA polynomial version of the Generator Coordinate Dirac-Fock (p-GCDF) method is introduced and applied to develop Adapted Gaussian Basis Sets (AGBS) for helium- and beryllium-like atomic species (He, Ne +8, Ar +16, Sn +48, Be, Ne +6, Ar +14, and Sn +46) and for Kr and Xe atoms. The Dirac-Fock-Coulomb and Dirac-Fock-Breit energies obtained with these basis sets are in excellent agreement with numerical finite-difference calculations. Moreover, the sizes of the AGBS generated here with the p-GCDF method are significantly smaller than the size of previous relativistic Gaussian basis sets.
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