| Literature DB >> 28451259 |
Gerard D O'Connor1, Bun Chan2,3, Julian A Sanelli4, Katie M Cergol2, Viktoras Dryza4, Richard J Payne2, Evan J Bieske4, Leo Radom2, Timothy W Schmidt1.
Abstract
We apply a combination of state-of-the-art experimental and quantum-chemical methods to elucidate the electronic and chemical energetics of hydrogen adduction to a model open-shell graphene fragment. The lowest-energy adduct, 1H-phenalene, is determined to have a bond dissociation energy of 258.1 kJ mol-1, while other isomers exhibit reduced or in some cases negative bond dissociation energies, the metastable species being bound by the emergence of a conical intersection along the high-symmetry dissociation coordinate. The gas-phase excitation spectrum of 1H-phenalene and its radical cation are recorded using laser spectroscopy coupled to mass-spectrometry. Several electronically excited states of both species are observed, allowing the determination of the excited-state bond dissociation energy. The ionization energy of 1H-phenalene is determined to be 7.449(17) eV, consistent with high-level W1X-2 calculations.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28451259 PMCID: PMC5369534 DOI: 10.1039/c6sc03787a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1The structure of 1H-phenalene, the result of H-addition to phenalenyl radical (C13H10, B3-LYP/6-311G(d,p)).
Fig. 2Photofragmentation spectrum of argon-tagged 1H-phenalene radical cation, compared with the calculated X-MCQDPT2[9,8]/tzv(2df,p) stick spectrum, shifted by +1200 cm–1. The increased noise at the low-energy end of the spectrum is an artefact of OPO power-correction.
Calculated X-MCQDPT2 (vertical) and experimental excitation energies (cm–1) of 1H-phenalene radical cation
| State | [3, 4] | [5, 5] | [7, 7] | [9, 8] | Experiment |
| D1 | 10 708 | 8742 | 9341 | 9693 | — |
| D2 | 19 506 | 11 475 | 12 551 | 12 704 | 14 357 |
| D3 | 32 915 | 19 327 | 18 323 | 18 685 | 19 735 |
| D4 | — | 30 293 | 21 523 | 21 895 | 23 985 |
[n, o] corresponds to an active space of n electrons in o orbitals.
Fig. 3Assigned low-frequency region of the REMPI-TOF spectrum of 1H-phenalene (m/z 166) relative to 29 527 cm–1. Inset: REMPI-TOF spectrum of 1H-phenalene relative to 29 527 cm–1, compared with calculated Franck–Condon–Herzberg–Teller spectrum.
Experimental and calculated relative frequencies (cm–1) for vibronic bands of 1H-phenalene
| Assignment | Exp. | Harm. | Anharm. |
|
| 2 | 254 | 224 | 276 | +22 |
| 2 | 325 | 304 | 316 | –9 |
| 2 | 366 | 384 | 351 | –15 |
| 2 | 864 | 886 | 884 | +20 |
|
| 409 | 401 | 398 | –11 |
|
| 435 | 420 | 420 | –15 |
|
| 442 | 453 | 447 | +5 |
|
| 580 | 602 | 602 | +22 |
|
| 947 | 964 | +17 | |
|
| 1036 | 1031 | –5 | |
|
| 1616 | 1603 | 1606 | –10 |
Tentative assignment.
Calculated X-MCQDPT2 (vertical) and experimental excitation energies (cm–1) of 1H-phenalene
| State | [4, 4] | [6, 5] | Experiment |
| S1 | 28 457 | 28 523 | 29 527 |
| S2 | 30 027 | 30 261 | 30 907 |
| S3 | 39 828 | 38 563 | — |
Calculated and experimental ionization energy (IE) of 1H-phenalene
| Method | eV |
| B3-LYP/6-311++G(3df,3pd) | 7.13 |
| G3X(MP2)-RAD | 7.56 |
| G4(MP2) | 7.41 |
| G4(MP2)-6X | 7.61 |
| CCSD(T)-F12b/A'VDZ | 7.44 |
| W1X-2 | 7.49 |
| Experiment | 7.449(17) |
Experiment brackets result between 7.432 and 7.466 eV.
Bond dissociation energies (BDE, kJ mol–1) for isomers of phenalene (C13H10)
| Vibrationless | 0 K | 298 K | |
|
| |||
| B3-LYP/6-311++G(3df,3pd) | 271.2 | 239.6 | 244.8 |
| G3X(MP2)-RAD | 286.8 | 255.1 | 260.3 |
| G4(MP2) | 299.4 | 267.7 | 272.9 |
| G4(MP2)-6X | 310.0 | 278.3 | 283.5 |
| CCSD(T)-F12b/VDZ | 288.4 | 256.7 | 261.9 |
| W1X-2 | 289.8 | 258.1 | 263.3 |
|
| |||
| B3-LYP/6-311++G(3df,3pd) | 47.9 | 27.7 | 31.6 |
| G3X(MP2)-RAD | 68.5 | 48.3 | 52.1 |
| G4(MP2) | 82.2 | 62 | 65.8 |
| G4(MP2)-6X | 84.5 | 64.3 | 68.1 |
| CCSD(T)-F12b/A'VDZ | 60.3 | 40.1 | 43.9 |
| W1X-2 | 58.7 | 38.5 | 42.4 |
|
| |||
| B3-LYP/6-311++G(3df,3pd) | –16.8 | –41.5 | –36.7 |
| G3X(MP2)-RAD | 19.2 | –5.5 | –0.7 |
| G4(MP2) | 32.7 | 8 | 12.8 |
| G4(MP2)-6X | 36.4 | 11.7 | 16.5 |
| CCSD(T)-F12b/A'VDZ | 10.1 | –14.6 | –9.7 |
| W1X-2 | 6.3 | –18.4 | –13.6 |
|
| |||
| B3-LYP/6-311++G(3df,3pd) | 1.7 | –38.9 | –33.6 |
| G3X(MP2)-RAD | –60.9 | –101.5 | –96.3 |
| G4(MP2) | –47.4 | –87.9 | –82.7 |
| G4(MP2)-6X | –40.1 | –80.7 | –75.4 |
| CCSD(T)-F12b/A'VDZ | –58.8 | –99.3 | –94.1 |
| W1X-2 | –59.7 | –100.3 | –95.1 |
Fig. 4Energies of 1H-phenalene and its isomers (kJ mol–1), relative to the phenalenyl radical, calculated at the W1X-2 level (Table 5). Bold numbers are spectroscopically derived from this and previously published work.[18]