4.7 Article

Post-Transition State Dynamics in Gas Phase Reactivity: Importance of Bifurcations and Rotational Activation

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages 974-982

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.5b01135

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad [CTQ2012-35513-C02]
  2. STSM COST Action [CM1204]
  3. Project FOTOCARBON-CM of the Comunidad Autonoma de Madrid [S2013/MIT-2841]
  4. ANR project DynBioReact (ANR) [ANR-14-CE06-0029-01]
  5. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad of Spain
  6. Robert A. Welch Foundation [D-0005]
  7. GENCI-France [2012-2014[072484], 2015[x2015082484]]

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Beyond the established use of thermodynamic vs kinetic control to explain chemical reaction selectivity, the concept of bifurcations on a potential energy surface (PES) is proving to be of pivotal importance with regard to selectivity. In this article, we studied by means of post-transition state (TS) direct dynamics simulations the effect that vibrational and rotational excitation at the TS may have on selectivity on a bifurcating PES. With this aim, we studied the post-TS unimolecular reactivity of the [Ca(formamide)](2+) ion, for which Coulomb explosion and neutral loss reactions compete. The PES exhibits different kinds of nonintrinsic reaction coordinate (IRC) dynamics, among them PES bifurcations, which direct the trajectories to multiple reaction paths after passing the TS. Direct dynamics simulations were used to distinguish between the bifurcation non-IRC dynamics and non-IRC dynamics arising from atomistic motions directing the trajectories away from the IRC. Overall, we corroborated the idea that kinetic selectivity often does not reduce to a simple choice between paths with different barrier heights and instead dynamical behavior after passing the TS may be crucial. rotational excitation may play a pivotal role on the reaction selectivity favoring nonthermodynamic products.

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