Abstract
By computer simulation, using both quantum and classical dynamics, we determined the rate constant and the kinetic isotope effect of the rate-determining step in the neutral hydrolysis of p-methoxyphenyl dichloroacetate in aqueous solution. This step involves a proton transfer concerted with the formation of a CO bond. A method of biased sampling was used; the Gibbs free energy of the biased configuration from which proton transfer is likely to occur was determined by a combination of semiempirical quantum calculations and thermodynamic integration. The proton dynamics was modeled with the quantum-dynamical density matrix evolution method that includes nonadiabatic pathways. The proton dynamics is driven by a fluctuating proton potential that was derived from a classical molecular dynamics simulation of the system including solvent. The calculated rate constant of 3×10-2 s-1 agrees within the error of the calculation with the experimentally observed value of 2.78×10-3 . The calculated pseudo-first-order kinetic isotope effect of 3.9 is in good agreement with the experimentally observed value of 3.2. The results show the feasibility of computational approaches to slow reactions in complex environments, where proton transfer with an essential quantum-dynamical nature is the rate-limiting step. ©1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Comput Chem 20: 886-895, 1999.
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