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Theoretical investigations of the thermochemistry, structures, and internal rotation of conjugated polyynes

Posted on:2007-11-02Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of California, Los AngelesCandidate:Jarowski, Peter DFull Text:PDF
GTID:1441390005465651Subject:Chemistry
Abstract/Summary:
Chapter 1 discusses the thermochemistry of conjugated double and triple bonds. The conjugation stabilization energies of dienes and diynes are considerably larger than estimates based on heat of hydrogenation differences between 1,3-butadiyne and 1-butyne as well as between 1,3-butadiene and 1-butene. Such comparisons do not take into account the counterbalancing hyperconjugative stabilization of the partially hydrogenated products by their ethyl groups. When alkyl hyperconjugation is considered, the conjugation stabilization of diynes (≈ 9.3 kcal/mol) is found by two methods (involving isomerization of non-conjugated into conjugated isomers and heats of hydrogenation) to be larger than that of dienes (≈ 8.2 kcal/mol).; In Chapter 2 the stabilization of substituted organic radicals, relative to methyl, are computed using bond separation energies and the block localized wavefunction method. These energies are typically evaluated from C-H bond dissociation energies (computed here by the CBS-RAD method). However, this method gives stabilization energies of an increasing number of mono-, di-, and tri-substituted vinyl and ethynyl substituents, which differ from the predictions of Perturbation Molecular Orbital (PMO) and Huckel Molecular Orbital (HMO) theory. The saturation (attenuation) effect for both series should be monotonic and small. Instead, the attenuation computed by the allylic series is larger than that predicted by HMO theory and the behavior of the propargylic series is erratic. These discrepancies arise from the use of bond dissociation energy data in the evaluations, which depend not only on the stabilization of the radicals, but also on the substantial substituent effects (e.g., hyperconjugation) on the energies of the reference hydrocarbons. New evaluation schemes are proposed that avoid such complications and thus estimate radical stabilization effects directly; the results agree with PMO and HMO theories. Substitution effects are analyzed using isodesmic equations with CBS-RAD data and also with the block localized wavefunction (BLW) method. The new estimates give essentially the same vinyl (22.3 kcal/mol) and ethynyl (21.9 kcal/mol) stabilization energies in the allyl and propargyl radicals, contrary to conventional evaluations. Likewise, the vinyl and ethynyl stabilizations in di-substituted and tri-substituted radicals are similar. These conclusions are corroborated with the block localized wavefunction (BLW) method, which is used to analyze resonance stabilization energies in the radical systems and hyperconjugative stabilization energies in the reference hydrocarbons.; Chapter 3 presents the structures, heats of formation, and strain energies of diacetylene (buta-1,3-diynediyl) expanded molecules computed with ab initio and molecular mechanics calculations. Expanded cubane, prismane, tetrahedrane, and expanded monocyclics and bicyclics were optimized at the HF/6-31G(d) and B3LYP/6-31G(d) levels. The heats of formation of these systems were obtained from isodesmic equations at the HF/6-31G(d) level. Heats of formation were also calculated from Benson group equivalents. The strain energies of these expanded molecules were estimated by several independent methods. An adapted MM3* molecular mechanics force field, specifically parameterized to treat conjugated acetylene units, was employed for one measure of strain energy and as an additional method for structural analysis. Expanded dodecahedrane and icosahedrane were calculated by this method. Expanded molecules were considered structurally in the context of their potential material applications.; Chapter 4 addresses the computation of the rotational barriers of substituted ethynlene and butatriene as well as their geometric and electronic structures. The barriers to internal rotation of methylated, ethynylated, and vinylated butatrienes and alkenes were calculated at the CASPT2/6-31G(d)//B3LYP/6-31G(d) level. Calculated butatriene rotational barriers ar...
Keywords/Search Tags:Conjugated, Energies, Block localized wavefunction, Structures, Calculated
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