Literature DB >> 22249745

Influence of electron correlation and degeneracy on the Fukui matrix and extension of frontier molecular orbital theory to correlated quantum chemical methods.

Patrick Bultinck1, Dimitri Van Neck, Guillaume Acke, Paul W Ayers.   

Abstract

The Fukui function is considered as the diagonal element of the Fukui matrix in position space, where the Fukui matrix is the derivative of the one particle density matrix (1DM) with respect to the number of electrons. Diagonalization of the Fukui matrix, expressed in an orthogonal orbital basis, explains why regions in space with negative Fukui functions exist. Using a test set of molecules, electron correlation is found to have a remarkable effect on the eigenvalues of the Fukui matrix. The Fukui matrices at the independent electron model level are mathematically proven to always have an eigenvalue equal to exactly unity while the rest of the eigenvalues possibly differ from zero but sum to zero. The loss of idempotency of the 1DM at correlated levels of theory causes the loss of these properties. The influence of electron correlation is examined in detail and the frontier molecular orbital concept is extended to correlated levels of theory by defining it as the eigenvector of the Fukui matrix with the largest eigenvalue. The effect of degeneracy on the Fukui matrix is examined in detail, revealing that this is another way by which the unity eigenvalue and perfect pairing of eigenvalues can disappear.

Year:  2012        PMID: 22249745     DOI: 10.1039/c2cp22543c

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Chem Chem Phys        ISSN: 1463-9076            Impact factor:   3.676


  6 in total

1.  Analysis of molecular and (di)atomic dual-descriptor functions and matrices.

Authors:  Diego R Alcoba; Ofelia B Oña; Alicia Torre; Luis Lain; Patrick Bultinck
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2017-05-10       Impact factor: 1.810

2.  In pursuit of negative Fukui functions: examples where the highest occupied molecular orbital fails to dominate the chemical reactivity.

Authors:  Eleonora Echegaray; Carlos Cárdenas; Sandra Rabi; Nataly Rabi; Sungmin Lee; Farnaz Heidar Zadeh; Alejandro Toro-Labbe; James S M Anderson; Paul W Ayers
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2012-10-23       Impact factor: 1.810

3.  In pursuit of negative Fukui functions: molecules with very small band gaps.

Authors:  Eleonora Echegaray; Sandra Rabi; Carlos Cárdenas; Farnaz Heidar Zadeh; Nataly Rabi; Sungmin Lee; James S M Anderson; Alejandro Toro-Labbe; Paul W Ayers
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2014-02-28       Impact factor: 1.810

4.  Site of reactivity models predict molecular reactivity of diverse chemicals with glutathione.

Authors:  Tyler B Hughes; Grover P Miller; S Joshua Swamidass
Journal:  Chem Res Toxicol       Date:  2015-03-16       Impact factor: 3.739

5.  Introducing a new bond reactivity index: Philicities for natural bond orbitals.

Authors:  Jesús Sánchez-Márquez; David Zorrilla; Víctor García; Manuel Fernández
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2017-12-22       Impact factor: 1.810

6.  Modeling Reactivity to Biological Macromolecules with a Deep Multitask Network.

Authors:  Tyler B Hughes; Na Le Dang; Grover P Miller; S Joshua Swamidass
Journal:  ACS Cent Sci       Date:  2016-07-29       Impact factor: 14.553

  6 in total

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