This paper shows that the differences between the barriers of the halogen exchange reactions, in the H + XH systems, and the hydrogen abstraction reactions, in the X + HX systems (X = F, Cl, Br), measure the covalent-ionic resonance energies of the corresponding X-H bonds. These processes are investigated using CCSD(T) calculations as well as the breathing-orbital valence bond (BOVB) method. Thus, the VB analysis shows that (i) at the level of covalent structures the barriers are the same for the two series and (ii) the higher barriers for halogen exchange processes originate solely from the less efficient mixing of the ionic structures into the respective covalent structures. The barrier differences, in the HXH vs XHX series, which decrease as X is varied from F to I, can be estimated as one-quarter of the covalent-ionic resonance energy of the H-X bond. The largest difference (22 kcal/mol) is calculated for X = F in accord with the finding that the H-F bond possesses the largest covalent-ionic resonance energy, 87 kcal/mol, which constitutes the major part of the bonding energy. The H-F bond belongs to the class of "charge-shift" bonds (Shaik, S.; Danovich, D.; Silvi, B.; Lauvergnat, D. L.; Hiberty, P. C. Chem. Eur. J. 2005, 21, 6358), which are all typified by dominant covalent-ionic resonance energies. Since the barrier difference between the two series is an experimental measure of the resonance energy quantity, in the particular case of X = F, the unusually high barrier for the fluorine exchange reaction emerges as an experimental manifestation of charge-shift bonding.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja053130m | DOI Listing |
J Am Chem Soc
September 2023
Department of Chemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, United States.
This paper describes the nature of the hydrogen bond (HB), B---H-A, using valence bond theory (VBT). Our analysis shows that the most important HB interactions are polarization and charge transfer, and their corresponding sum displays a pattern that is identical for a variety of energy decomposition analysis (EDA) methods. Furthermore, the sum terms obtained with the different EDA methods correlate linearly with the corresponding VB quantities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemistry
June 2023
Institute of Chemistry, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, 9190401, Israel.
We present here a valence bond analysis of structure and π-delocalization in Ge (NH) , which models germanazene that was prepared by Power et al. To get a broader perspective, we explore the entire E (NH) series (E=C, Si, Ge, Sn, Pb). Thus, while (4n+2)π systems of carbon rings are aromatic with cyclic π-delocalization, the E (NH) rings are dominated by a nonbonded structure, wherein π-lone pairs are localized on the N atoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Org Chem
November 2021
Institute of Chemistry, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91904, Israel.
Explosion begins by rupture of a specific bond, in the explosive, called a trigger linkage. We characterize this bond in nitro-containing explosives. Valence-bond (VB) investigations of X-NO linkages in alkyl nitrates, nitramines, and nitro esters establish the existence of Pauli repulsion that destabilizes the covalent structure of these bonds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Theory Comput
March 2021
Department of Chemistry and Division of Quantum Chemistry and Physical Chemistry, KU Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 200F, Leuven B-3001, Belgium.
Vibrationally excited deuterium fluoride (DF) formed by fluorine atom reaction with a solvent was found (, , 347, 530) to relax rapidly (less than 10 ps) in acetonitrile- (CDCN) and dichloromethane- (CDCl). However, insights into how CDCl facilitates this energy relaxation have so far been lacking, given the weak interaction between DF and a single CDCl. In this work, we report the results of reactive simulations with a two-state reactive empirical valence bond (EVB) potential to study the energy deposited into nascent DF after transition-state passage and of nonequilibrium molecular dynamics simulations using multiple different potential energy functions to model the relaxation dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
January 2020
Laboratoire de Chimie Physique, CNRS UMR8000, Bat. 349, Université de Paris-Sud, 91405, Orsay Cédex, France.
Charge-shift bonds (CSBs) constitute a new class of bonds different than covalent/polar-covalent and ionic bonds. Bonding in CSBs does not arise from either the covalent or the ionic structures of the bond, but rather from the resonance interaction between the structures. This Essay describes the reasons why the CSB family was overlooked by valence-bond pioneers and then demonstrates that the unique status of CSBs is not theory-dependent.
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