4.8 Article

A quantitative metric for organic radical stability and persistence using thermodynamic and kinetic features

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 12, Issue 39, Pages 13158-13166

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1sc02770k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-AC36-08GO28308]
  2. Advanced Research Projects Agency -Energy (ARPA-E), US Department of Energy
  3. National Science Foundation [ACI-1532235, ACI1532236]
  4. University of Colorado Boulder and Colorado State University
  5. Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE) [TGCHE180056]

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The study shows that the long-term stability of organic radicals requires both thermodynamic and kinetic stability, and the molecular descriptors obtained through quantum chemical calculations can help predict the location of long-lived radicals. The radical stability score is an effective metric for evaluating stable radicals, outperforming thermodynamic scales based on bond dissociation enthalpies.
Long-lived organic radicals are promising candidates for the development of high-performance energy solutions such as organic redox batteries, transistors, and light-emitting diodes. However, stable organic radicals that remain unreactive for an extended time and that can be stored and handled under ambient conditions are rare. A necessary but not sufficient condition for organic radical stability is the presence of thermodynamic stabilization, such as conjugation with an adjacent pi-bond or lone-pair, or hyperconjugation with a sigma-bond. However, thermodynamic factors alone do not result in radicals with extended lifetimes: many resonance-stabilized radicals are transient species that exist for less than a millisecond. Kinetic stabilization is also necessary for persistence, such as steric effects that inhibit radical dimerization or reaction with solvent molecules. We describe a quantitative approach to map organic radical stability, using molecular descriptors intended to capture thermodynamic and kinetic considerations. The comparison of an extensive dataset of quantum chemical calculations of organic radicals with experimentally-known stable radical species reveals a region of this feature space where long-lived radicals are located. These descriptors, based upon maximum spin density and buried volume, are combined into a single metric, the radical stability score, that outperforms thermodynamic scales based on bond dissociation enthalpies in identifying remarkably long-lived radicals. This provides an objective and accessible metric for use in future molecular design and optimization campaigns. We demonstrate this approach in identifying Pareto-optimal candidates for stable organic radicals.

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