Abstract

Models for the quick estimation of energy splittings caused by coherent tunneling of hydrogen atoms are evaluated with available experimental data for alcohols and improvements are proposed. The discussed models are mathematically simple and require only results from routine quantum chemical computations, i.e. hybrid DFT calculation of the equilibrium geometry and the transition state within the harmonic approximation. A benchmark of experimental splittings spanning four orders of magnitude for 27 alcohol species is captured by three evaluated models with a mean symmetric deviation factor of 1.7, 1.5 and 1.4, respectively, i.e. the calculated values deviate on average by this factor in either direction. Limitations of the models are explored with alcohols featuring uncommon properties, such as an inverted conformational energy sequence, a very light molecular frame, an elevated torsional frequency, or a coupling with a second internal degree of freedom. If the splitting of either the protiated or deuterated form of an alcohol is already experimentally determined, the one of the second isotopolog can be estimated by three additional models with a mean symmetric deviation factor of 1.14, 1.19 and 1.15, respectively. It is shown that this can be achieved with a novel approach without any quantum chemical calculation by directly correlating experimental splittings of isotopologs across related species. This is also demonstrated for other classes of compounds with hydrogen tunneling, such as amines, thiols, and phenols. Furthermore, it is found that the isotope effect can even be anticipated without any further knowledge about the system solely from the size of either splitting with a mean symmetric deviation factor of 1.3. This is based on an extensive sample of 77 pairs of splittings spanning eight orders of magnitude for isotopologs of chemically diverse compounds.

Highlights

  • In quantum mechanics atoms[1,2] can tunnel coherently back and forth between degenerate positions,[3] with the tunneling frequency depending on the separating barrier, the mass of the atom and the attempt frequency of the associated small-amplitude vibration

  • This phenomenon manifests itself in a splitting of the energy levels of the system which enables the accurate determination of quantum dynamics by time-independent spectroscopy

  • If one benchmark value is overestimated by a factor of 1.8 and another is underestimated by a factor of 1.4 by the model, the mean symmetric deviation factor (MSDF) will be the arithmetic mean of 1.6

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In quantum mechanics atoms (and entire molecular groups)[1,2] can tunnel coherently back and forth between degenerate positions,[3] with the tunneling frequency depending on the separating barrier, the mass of the atom and the attempt frequency of the associated small-amplitude vibration. This phenomenon manifests itself in a splitting of the energy levels of the system which enables the accurate determination of quantum dynamics by time-independent spectroscopy. When the vibrational zero-point level of the smallamplitude motion is close to the top of the barrier, splittings can be in the order of 100 cmÀ1 hc.[14,15,16,17,18,19] In contrast, the perhaps smallest splitting resolved so far in the deep tunneling regime

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call