Abstract

The heats of formation of diphosphene (cis- and trans-P2H2), phopshinophosphinidene (singlet and triplet H2PP) and diphosphine (P2H4), as well as those of the P2H and P2H3 radicals resulting from PH bond cleavages, have been calculated by using high-level ab initio electronic structure theory. Energies were calculated using coupled-cluster theory with a perturbative treatment for triple excitations (CCSD(T)) and employing augmented correlation consistent basis sets with additional tight d-functions on P (aug-cc-pV(n+d)Z) up to quadruple- or quintuple-zeta, to perform a complete basis set extrapolation for the energy. Geometries and vibrational frequencies were determined with the CCSD(T) method. Core-valence and scalar relativistic corrections were included, as well as scaled zero-point energies. We find the following heats of formation (kcal/mol) at 298 [0] K: DeltaH(degree)(f)(P2H) = 53.4 [54.4]; DeltaH(degree)(f)(cis-P2H2) = 32.0 [33.9]; DeltaH(degree)(f)(trans-P2H2) = 28.7 [30.6]; DeltaH(degree)(f)(H2PP) = 53.7 [55.6]; DeltaH(degree)(f)(3H2PP) = 56.5 [58.3]; DeltaH(degree)(f)(P2H3) = 32.3 [34.8]; DeltaH(degree)(f)(P2H4) = 5.7 [9.1] (expt, 5.0 +/- 1.0 at 298 K); and DeltaH(degree)(f)(CH3PH2) = -5.0 [-1.4]. We estimate these values to have an accuracy of +/-1.0 kcal/mol. In contrast to earlier results, we found a singlet ground state for phosphinophosphinidene (H2PP) with a singlet-triplet energy gap of 2.8 kcal/mol. We calculated the heats of formation of the methylated derivatives CH3PPH, CH3HPPH2, CH3PPCH3, CH3HPP, (CH3)2PP, (CH3)2PPH2, and CH3HPPHCH3 by using isodesmic reactions at the MP2/CBS level. The calculated results for the hydrogenation reactions RPPR + H2 --> RHPPHR and R2PP + H2 --> R2PPH2 show that substitution of an organic substituent for H improves the energetics, suggesting that secondary diphosphines and diphosphenes are potential candidates for use in a chemical hydrogen storage system. A comparison with the nitrogen analogues is given. The mechanism for H2-generation from diphosphine without and with BH3 as a catalyst was examined. Including tunneling corrections, the rate constant for the catalyzed reaction is 4.5 x 1015 times faster than the uncatalyzed result starting from separated catalyst and PH2PH2.

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