Abstract

The debate over whether kinetic energy (KE) or potential energy (PE) are the fundamental energy components that contribute to forming covalent bonds has been enduring and stimulating over time. However, the supremacy of these energy components in reactions where multiple bonds are simultaneously formed or broken has yet to be explored. In this study, we use the reaction electronic flux (REF), an effective tool for investigating changes in driving electronic activity when bond formation or dissociation occurs in a chemical reaction, to examine the fluctuations in the KE and PE in a multi-bond reaction. To that end, the activation of CO by low-valent group 14 catalysts through a concerted -bond metathesis mechanism is analyzed. The findings of this preliminary study suggest that the REF can be utilized as a tool to rationalize alterations in the KE and PE in a multi-bond reaction. Specifically, analyses across the reaction coordinate reveal that changes in the KE and PE precede activation in the REF, stimulating the electronic activity where bond formation or dissociation processes dominate. The activation of CO by the low-valent LEH catalysts (L = N,N'-bis(2,6-diisopropyl phenyl)- -diketiminate; E = Si, Ge, Sn, and Pb) was studied along the reaction coordinate at the M06-2X/6-31G(d,p)-LANL2DZ(E) level of theory. The respective minimum energy path calculations were obtained using the intrinsic reaction coordinate (IRC) procedure. The reaction electronic flux (REF) was calculated through the computation of the electronic chemical potential using the frontier molecular orbital approximation. Mayer bond orders along the reaction coordinate have been determined using the NBO 3.1 program in Gaussian16. Most of the reaction coordinate quantities reported in this study (REF, KE, PE, among others) have been determined using the Kudi program and custom Python scripts.

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