Benzene Radical Anion Microsolvated in Ammonia Clusters: Modeling the Transition from an Unbound Resonance to a Bound Species
Status PubMed-not-MEDLINE Jazyk angličtina Země Spojené státy americké Médium print-electronic
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články
PubMed
34165987
DOI
10.1021/acs.jpca.1c04594
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
The benzene radical anion, well-known in organic chemistry as the first intermediate in the Birch reduction of benzene in liquid ammonia, exhibits intriguing properties from the point of view of quantum chemistry. Notably, it has the character of a metastable shape resonance in the gas phase, while measurements in solution find it to be experimentally detectable and stable. In this light, our previous calculations performed in bulk liquid ammonia explicitly reveal that solvation leads to stabilization. Here, we focus on the transition of the benzene radical anion from an unstable gas-phase ion to a fully solvated bound species by explicit ionization calculations of the radical anion solvated in molecular clusters of increasing size. The computational cost of the largest systems is mitigated by combining density functional theory with auxiliary methods including effective fragment potentials or approximating the bulk by polarizable continuum models. Using this methodology, we obtain the cluster size dependence of the vertical binding energy of the benzene radical anion converging to the value of -2.3 eV at a modest computational cost.
Citace poskytuje Crossref.org
Stability and Reactivity of Aromatic Radical Anions in Solution with Relevance to Birch Reduction
Stabilization of benzene radical anion in ammonia clusters