Publications by authors named "Stefano Pelloni"

The electric dipole-magnetic dipole polarizability tensor κ', introduced to interpret the optical activity of chiral molecules, has been expressed in terms of a series of density functions kαβ', which can be integrated all over the three-dimensional space to evaluate components καβ' and trace καα'. A computational approach to kαβ', based on frequency-dependent electronic current densities induced by monochromatic light shining on a probe molecule, has been developed. The dependence of kαβ' on the origin of the coordinate system has been investigated in connection with the corresponding change of καβ'.

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The diagonal components and the trace of tensors which account for chiroptical response of the hydrazine molecule N H , that is, static anapole magnetizability and frequency-dependent electric dipole-magnetic dipole polarisability, are a function of the H─N─N─H dihedral angle. They vanish for symmetry reasons at ϕ = 0° and ϕ = 180°, corresponding respectively to C and C point group symmetries, that is, cis and trans conformers characterized by the presence of molecular symmetry planes. Nonetheless, vanishing diagonal components have been observed also in the proximity of H─N─N─H = 90°, in which the point group symmetry is C and hydrazine is unquestionably chiral.

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Assuming that graphene is an "infinite alternant" polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon resulting from tessellation of a surface by only six-membered carbon rings, planar fragments of various size and shape (hexagon, triangle, rectangle, and rhombus) have been considered to investigate their response to a magnetic field applied perpendicularly. Allowing for simple polygonal current models, the diatropicity of a series of polycyclic textures has been reliably determined by comparing quantitative indicators, the π-electron contribution to I , the magnetic field-induced current susceptibility of the peripheral circuit, to ξ∥ and to σ∥(CM)=-NICS∥(CM), respectively the out-of-plane components of the magnetizability tensor and of the magnetic shielding tensor at the center of mass. Extended numerical tests and the analysis based on the polygonal model demonstrate that (i) ξ∥ and σ∥(CM) yield inadequate and sometimes erroneous measures of diatropicity, as they are heavily flawed by spurious geometrical factors, (ii) I values computed by simple polygonal models are valid quantitative indicators of aromaticity on the magnetic criterion, preferable to others presently available, whenever current susceptibility cannot be calculated ab initio as a flux integral, (iii) the hexagonal shape is the most effective to maximize the strength of π-electron currents over the molecular perimeter, (iv) the edge current strength of triangular and rhombic graphene fragments is usually much smaller than that of hexagonal ones, (v) doping by boron and nitrogen nuclei can regulate and even inhibit peripheral ring currents, (vi) only for very large rectangular fragments can substantial current strengths be expected.

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In the presence of a static, nonhomogeneous magnetic field, represented by the axial vector B at the origin of the coordinate system and by the polar vector C=∇×B, assumed to be spatially uniform, the chiral molecules investigated in this paper carry an orbital electronic anapole, described by the polar vector A. The electronic interaction energy of these molecules in nonordered media is a cross term, coupling B and C via a¯, one third of the trace of the anapole magnetizability aαβ tensor, that is, WBC=-a¯B·C. Both A and W(BC) have opposite sign in the two enantiomeric forms, a fact quite remarkable from the conceptual point of view.

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The change in the electronic structure of coronene upon doping with nitrogen or boron has been theoretically studied by means of its magnetic properties and magnetic field induced current density maps. The addition of two atoms of nitrogen or boron to the central ring of coronene causes a drastic variation in the delocalization of π-electrons, which does not depend on its nature but instead on its position. Then, doping in the para position makes coronene more aromatic while doping in the meta position makes it to become antiaromatic.

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Chiral discrimination by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy might be achieved through the pseudo-scalar derived from the dipole shielding polarizability tensor. Coupled Cluster Singles and Doubles-Quadratic Response (CCSD-QR) calculations inside the continuous translation of the origin of the current density formalism have been carried out to determine the effects of basis set, electron correlation, and gauge translation on the determination of this magnitude in oxaziridine derivatives. Inclusion of electronic correlation is needed for adequately describing the pseudo-scalar for the heavier nuclei, making CCSD a rigorous and affordable method to compute these high order properties in medium-sized molecules.

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Some noncyclic small molecules, electrically neutral or charged, sustain interatomic electronic currents in the presence of a stationary, spatially uniform magnetic field. The existence of fairly large delocalized electron flow is demonstrated in H₂O, BH₃, NH₃, CH₄, CH₃-CH₃, H₃O⁺, CH₃⁺, and NH₄⁺, by plots of quantum mechanical current density. Convincing quantitative evidence is arrived at by current strengths, defined via a flux integral of the ab initio current density.

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It is shown that the diagonal components of the mixed electric-magnetic dipole polarizability tensor, used to rationalize the optical rotatory power of chiral molecules, are origin independent, if they are referred to the coordinate system defined by the eigenvectors of the dynamic electric dipole polarizability, for a given value ω of the frequency of a monochromatic wave impinging on an ordered sample. Within this reference frame, the individual diagonal components of the mixed electric-magnetic dipole polarizability are separately measurable properties. The theoretical method is applied via a test calculation to the cyclic 1,2-M enantiomer of the dioxin molecule, using a large Gaussian basis set to estimate near Hartree-Fock values within a series of dipole length, velocity, and acceleration representations.

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To explain peculiar effects of electron delocalization on the magnetic response of planar cyclic molecules, a basic model that accounts for their actual geometrical structure has been developed by integrating the differential Biot-Savart law. Such a model, based on a single polygonal circuit with ideal features, is shown to be applicable to electrically neutral or charged monocyclic compounds, as well as linear polycyclic condensed hydrocarbons. Two theoretical quantities, easily computed via quantum chemistry codes (the out-of-plane components of the magnetizability, ξ∥, and the magnetic shielding σ∥(h) of points P on the symmetry axis orthogonal to the molecular plane, at distance h from the center of mass) are shown to be linearly connected, for example, for monocyclic structures, via the relationship σ∥(h) = ±(μ0/2π)ξ∥D(h), where D(h) is a simple function of geometrical parameters.

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It is proven that, within the conventional approach using a common origin and gaugeless basis sets for the calculation of atomic magnetizability and Larmor current density induced by an external magnetic field, the natural gauge origin coincides with the nucleus. Recipes for defining an optimal gauge origin for the calculation of magnetizability and magnetic shielding at the nuclei of a molecule are given. Within the common origin approach, the paramagnetic contributions to the components of magnetic tensors of a molecule are represented by a minimum number of non-vanishing parameters if the gauge origin is chosen at a point characterized by the total molecular symmetry, e.

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A simple classical model of magnetic-field induced electron flow is used to evaluate the ring current strength for a few inorganic monocyclic compounds: B(3)H(3)N(3), B(3)H(3)O(3), P(6), N(6), Si(6)H(6), N, Al and H(6). It is shown that, for these neutral and charged systems, sustaining delocalized electron currents in the presence of a magnetic field B(ext) orthogonal to the σ(h) plane, the out-of-plane component of the nuclear magnetic shielding along the central axis is connected to the out-of-plane magnetizability by a simple equation, involving the radius of an average loop of current. A novel estimate of this effective radius is provided.

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A simple classical model of magnetic-field induced π-electron flow is discussed, showing that the contribution to the σ(∥) out-of-plane component of the virtual magnetic shielding provided by π-ring currents, at points P along the C(n) axis of cyclic planar unsaturated hydrocarbons C(n)H(n) with D(nh) symmetry, in the presence of a magnetic field B(ext) at right angles to the σ(h) plane, is, with good approximation, connected with the π-electron contribution to the out-of-plane component of the magnetizability, ξ(∥). The relationship is σ(∥)(h) = -(μ(0)/2π)(s(2) + h(2))(-3/2)ξ(∥), where s is the distance of a C nucleus from the center of the carbon ring, and h is the distance of P from σ(h). The ring current susceptibility, that is, the strength of the π currents, expressed in nA/T (nano ampère per tesla) within the SI system of units, is given by ∂I/∂B(ext) = -ξ(∥)/(πs(2)), which can be used as a reliable virtual measure of magnetotropicity and relative π-electron mobility in isoelectronic systems.

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Three-dimensional models of the quantum-mechanical current density J(B) , induced in the electron cloud of the C(10)H(10) pentaprismane molecule by a magnetic field B applied along the C(5) (a C(2)) symmetry axis, orthogonal to the pentagonal (a rectangular) face, and denoted by B(‖) (B(⊥)), have been constructed. Predictions of near Hartree-Fock quality are reported for the diagonal components of magnetic tensors, magnetizability (ξ), nuclear shielding of carbon (σ(C)) and hydrogen (σ(H)), and virtual shielding at the center of mass (σ(CM)). The complicated spatial features of the induced electronic current-density field have been rationalized and compactly described via stagnation graphs that elucidate the details of its topological structure.

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By partitioning the bond current strength (current susceptibility) into plane symmetric and plane antisymmetric contributions, it is shown that 91% of the diatropic ring current of benzene is transported by the π electrons and the remaining non-negligible 9% is sustained by the σ electrons. In planar cyclooctatetraene 94% (6%) of the paratropic ring current is transported by the π (σ) electrons. In cyclopropane 95% (5%) of the diatropic ring current is transported by the σ (π-like) electrons.

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Three-dimensional models of the quantum-mechanical current density induced by a uniform magnetic field in the electron cloud have been obtained for closed-shell systems BeH(-), BH, and CH(+), characterized by induced orbital paramagnetism, and in planar unsaturated hydrocarbons C(4)H(4) and clamped C(8)H(8), exhibiting pi paramagnetism. It is shown that, even for these paramagnetic systems, the paramagnetic contributions to magnetic susceptibilities and nuclear magnetic shielding, customarily taken into account in perturbation theory approaches, can formally be eliminated via the procedure of continuous transformation of the origin of the current density-paramagnetic zero. The definition of magnetic response properties can therefore be recast as a sum of two formally "diamagnetic" terms for any molecule, including systems showing strong induced orbital paramagnetism.

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The local response to an external magnetic field normal to the molecular plane of naphthalene and anthracene was investigated via current density and magnetic shielding density maps. The Biot-Savart law shows that the deshielding caused by pi-ring currents in naphthalene is stronger for alpha- than for beta-protons due to geometrical factors. The shielding tensor of the carbon nuclei in both molecules is strongly anisotropic and its out-of-plane component determines the up-field chemical shift of (13)C in nuclear magnetic resonance spectra.

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A spatial model of the electronic current density induced in the cubane molecule by applying an external magnetic-field has been constructed employing quantum mechanical methods at the Hartree-Fock level of accuracy. The topological features of the current density vector field are described via a stagnation graph that shows the isolated points and the lines at which the current vanishes. Shielding density maps based on the differential Biot-Savart law, along with a collection of current density maps, explain magnetic shielding at hydrogen and carbon nuclei, and virtual shielding at ring and cage centers.

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Spatial models of magnetic-field induced electronic ring currents have been constructed for the prismane molecule via stagnation graphs and current density maps. These tools provide an insight into the complicated phenomenology resulting from competition of diatropic and paratropic regimes that determine the magnitude of various components of magnetic susceptibility and magnetic shielding of hydrogen and carbon nuclei. Shielding density maps show that the differential Biot-Savart law, along with an atlas of the current density field, explains magnetic shielding at hydrogen and carbon nuclei and virtual shielding at ring and cage centers.

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Detailed investigations of electronic effects taking place within the molecular system of o-hydroxy Schiff bases have been performed. The analysis of geometry, local and global aromaticity, selected AIM-based parameters, and finally, pi-electron currents induced in the systems under consideration have been performed on the basis of quantum chemical calculations at the B3LYP/6-311+G** level of theory. The relation between localization/delocalization of pi-electrons within the whole system has been described.

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Dynamic magnetoelectric shieldings at the nuclei, having the same magnitude but opposite sign in d and l enantiomers, have been evaluated at the random-phase approximation level of accuracy for three chiral molecules of medium size. For frequencies normally operated in nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, calculated values are probably too small to be detectable in disordered phase. Within the same experimental conditions, the isotropic part of nuclear magnetic shielding polarizability and a related pseudoscalar provide contributions 3 orders of magnitude bigger than the average magnetoelectric shieldings to (i) the magnetic field induced at a resonant nucleus and (ii) the induced electric dipole of electrons rotating at the Larmor frequency; therefore, nuclear magnetic shielding polarizabilities are probably more suitable than nuclear magnetoelectric shieldings for chiral discrimination in nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy.

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Spatial models of the current density field induced in the cyclopropane molecule by stationary, homogeneous magnetic fields, parallel to either the C3 or the C2 symmetry axis, have been constructed. A compact, abridged representation of the models is given via stagnation graphs that convey essential information. Maps of streamlines and moduli are also reported to complete current models that have proven useful to rationalize magnetic tensor properties, that is, magnetizability, 1H and 13C nuclear shieldings, and magnetic shielding along the C3 symmetry axis.

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A representation of the current density induced in the [2.2]paracyclophane molecule by a homogeneous magnetic field parallel to the line joining the centers of the phenylene rings is given in compact form by a stagnation graph that conveys essential information. Analogous graphs were obtained for two perpendicular directions.

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