Abstract

In order to design high-energetic and insensitive explosives, the frontier orbital energy gaps, surface electrostatic potentials, nitro group charges, bond dissociation energies (BDEs) of the C-NO2 trigger bonds, and intermolecular interactions obtained by the M06-2X/6-311++G(2d,p) method were quantitatively correlated with the experimental drop hammer potential energies of 10 typical C-nitro explosives. The changes of several information-theoretic quantities (ITQs) in the density functional reactivity theory were discussed upon the formation of complexes. The BDEs in the explosives with six-membered ring are larger than those with five-membered ring. The frontier orbital energy gaps of the compounds with benzene ring are larger than those with N-heterocycle. The models involving the intermolecular interaction energies and the energy gaps could be used to predict the impact sensitivity of the C-nitro explosives, while those involving ΔSS, ΔIF, and ΔSGBP are invalid. With the more and more ITQs, the further studies are needed to seek for a good correlation between impact sensitivity measurements and ITQs for the energetic C-nitro compounds. The origin of sensitivity was revealed by the reduced density gradient method.

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