Literature DB >> 35783161

Describing Chemical Reactivity with Frontier Molecular Orbitalets.

Jincheng Yu1,2, Neil Qiang Su1,3, Weitao Yang1,4.   

Abstract

Locality in physical space is critical in understanding chemical reactivity in the analysis of various phenomena and processes in chemistry, biology, and materials science, as exemplified in the concepts of reactive functional groups and active sites. Frontier molecular orbitals (FMOs) pinpoint the locality of chemical bonds that are chemically reactive because of the associated orbital energies and thus have achieved great success in describing chemical reactivity, mainly for small systems. For large systems, however, the delocalization nature of canonical molecular orbitals makes it difficult for FMOs to highlight the locality of the chemical reactivity. To obtain localized molecular orbitals that also reflect the frontier nature of the chemical processes, we develop the concept of frontier molecular orbitalets (FMOLs) for describing the reactivity of large systems. The concept of orbitalets was developed recently in the localized orbital scaling correction method, which aims for eliminating the delocalization error in common density functional approximations. Orbitalets are localized in both physical and energy spaces and thus contain both orbital locality and energy information. The FMOLs are thus the orbitalets with energies highest among occupied orbitalets and lowest among unoccupied ones. The applications of FMOLs to hexadeca-1,3,5,7,9,11,13,15-octaene in its equilibrium geometry, inter- and intra-molecular charge-transfer systems, and two transition states of a bifurcating reaction demonstrate that FMOLs can connect quantum mechanical treatments of chemical systems and chemical reactivities by locating the reactive region of large chemical systems. Therefore, FMOLs extend the role of FMOs for small systems and describe the chemical reactivity of large systems with energy and locality insight, with potentially broad applications.
© 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.

Entities:  

Year:  2022        PMID: 35783161      PMCID: PMC9241161          DOI: 10.1021/jacsau.2c00085

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JACS Au        ISSN: 2691-3704


  34 in total

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Authors: 
Journal:  Phys Rev B Condens Matter       Date:  1993-04-15

2.  On the limits of highest-occupied molecular orbital driven reactions: the frontier effective-for-reaction molecular orbital concept.

Authors:  Rodrigo R da Silva; Teodorico C Ramalho; Joana M Santos; J Daniel Figueroa-Villar
Journal:  J Phys Chem A       Date:  2006-01-26       Impact factor: 2.781

3.  Bond orbitals from chemical valence theory.

Authors:  Artur Michalak; Mariusz Mitoraj; Tom Ziegler
Journal:  J Phys Chem A       Date:  2008-02-12       Impact factor: 2.781

4.  Insights into current limitations of density functional theory.

Authors:  Aron J Cohen; Paula Mori-Sánchez; Weitao Yang
Journal:  Science       Date:  2008-08-08       Impact factor: 47.728

5.  Developing paradigms of chemical bonding: adaptive natural density partitioning.

Authors:  Dmitry Yu Zubarev; Alexander I Boldyrev
Journal:  Phys Chem Chem Phys       Date:  2008-07-03       Impact factor: 3.676

6.  Ultrafast Elementary Photochemical Processes of Organic Molecules in Liquid Solution.

Authors:  Tatu Kumpulainen; Bernhard Lang; Arnulf Rosspeintner; Eric Vauthey
Journal:  Chem Rev       Date:  2016-12-13       Impact factor: 60.622

7.  Natural orbitals for chemical valence as descriptors of chemical bonding in transition metal complexes.

Authors:  Mariusz Mitoraj; Artur Michalak
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2006-09-21       Impact factor: 1.810

8.  Preserving Symmetry and Degeneracy in the Localized Orbital Scaling Correction Approach.

Authors:  Neil Qiang Su; Aaron Mahler; Weitao Yang
Journal:  J Phys Chem Lett       Date:  2020-02-10       Impact factor: 6.475

9.  Carbon avoids hypercoordination in CB6(-), CB6(2-), and C2B5(-) planar carbon-boron clusters.

Authors:  Boris B Averkiev; Dmitry Yu Zubarev; Lei-Ming Wang; Wei Huang; Lai-Sheng Wang; Alexander I Boldyrev
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2008-06-27       Impact factor: 15.419

10.  Modulating unimolecular charge transfer by exciting bridge vibrations.

Authors:  Zhiwei Lin; Candace M Lawrence; Dequan Xiao; Victor V Kireev; Spiros S Skourtis; Jonathan L Sessler; David N Beratan; Igor V Rubtsov
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2009-12-23       Impact factor: 15.419

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