Literature DB >> 14733558

Enthalpies of formation of gas-phase N3, N3-, N5+, and N5- from Ab initio molecular orbital theory, stability predictions for N5(+)N3(-) and N5(+)N5(-), and experimental evidence for the instability of N5(+)N3(-).

David A Dixon1, David Feller, Karl O Christe, William W Wilson, Ashwani Vij, Vandana Vij, H Donald Brooke Jenkins, Ryan M Olson, Mark S Gordon.   

Abstract

Ab initio molecular orbital theory has been used to calculate accurate enthalpies of formation and adiabatic electron affinities or ionization potentials for N3, N3-, N5+, and N5- from total atomization energies. The calculated heats of formation of the gas-phase molecules/ions at 0 K are DeltaHf(N3(2Pi)) = 109.2, DeltaHf(N3-(1sigma+)) = 47.4, DeltaHf(N5-(1A1')) = 62.3, and DeltaHf(N5+(1A1)) = 353.3 kcal/mol with an estimated error bar of +/-1 kcal/mol. For comparison purposes, the error in the calculated bond energy for N2 is 0.72 kcal/mol. Born-Haber cycle calculations, using estimated lattice energies and the adiabatic ionization potentials of the anions and electron affinities of the cations, enable reliable stability predictions for the hypothetical N5(+)N3(-) and N5(+)N5(-) salts. The calculations show that neither salt can be stabilized and that both should decompose spontaneously into N3 radicals and N2. This conclusion was experimentally confirmed for the N5(+)N3(-) salt by low-temperature metathetical reactions between N5SbF6 and alkali metal azides in different solvents, resulting in violent reactions with spontaneous nitrogen evolution. It is emphasized that one needs to use adiabatic ionization potentials and electron affinities instead of vertical potentials and affinities for salt stability predictions when the formed radicals are not vibrationally stable. This is the case for the N5 radicals where the energy difference between vertical and adiabatic potentials amounts to about 100 kcal/mol per N5.

Entities:  

Year:  2004        PMID: 14733558     DOI: 10.1021/ja0303182

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  13 in total

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7.  Strategy for chemically riveting catenated nitrogen chains.

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8.  Structural Properties of High-Energy N12C6 Molecules: Cyclic Hexamers of NCN.

Authors:  Nikko Ross; Douglas L Strout
Journal:  Comput Theor Chem       Date:  2015-12-15       Impact factor: 1.926

9.  Metal-ion binding to high-energy N12C4.

Authors:  Kasha Casey; Jessica Thomas; Zamyra Lambert; Douglas L Strout
Journal:  J Phys Chem A       Date:  2009-07-09       Impact factor: 2.781

10.  Experimental observation of TiN12+ cluster and theoretical investigation of its stable and metastable isomers.

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