4.6 Article

Introducing DDEC6 atomic population analysis: part 3. Comprehensive method to compute bond orders

Journal

RSC ADVANCES
Volume 7, Issue 72, Pages 45552-45581

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7ra07400j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF CAREER [DMR-1555376]
  2. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1555376] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Developing a comprehensive method to compute bond orders is a problem that has eluded chemists since Lewis's pioneering work on chemical bonding a century ago. Here, a computationally efficient method solving this problem is introduced and demonstrated for diverse materials including elements from each chemical group and period. The method is applied to non-magnetic, collinear magnetic, and noncollinear magnetic materials with localized or delocalized bonding electrons. Examples studied include the stretched O-2 molecule, 26 diatomic molecules, 3d and 5d transition metal solids, periodic materials with 1 to 8748 atoms per unit cell, a biomolecule, a hypercoordinate molecule, an electron deficient molecule, hydrogen bound systems, transition states, Lewis acid-base complexes, aromatic compounds, magnetic systems, ionic materials, dispersion bound systems, nanostructures,and other materials. From near-zero to high-order bonds were studied. Both the bond orders and the sum of bond orders for each atom are accurate across various bonding types: metallic, covalent, polar-covalent, ionic, aromatic, dative, hypercoordinate, electron deficient multi-centered, agostic, and hydrogen bonding. The method yields similar results for correlated wavefunction and density functional theory inputs and for different SZ values of a spin multiplet. The method requires only the electron and spin magnetization density distributions as input and has a computational cost scaling linearly with increasing number of atoms in the unit cell. No prior approach is as general. The method does not apply to electrides, highly timedependent states, some extremely high-energy excited states, and nuclear reactions.

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