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An ab initio study of the reaction mechanism of Co++NH3
Author(s) -
Tetsuya Taketsugu,
Mark S. Gordon
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
the journal of chemical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.071
H-Index - 357
eISSN - 1089-7690
pISSN - 0021-9606
DOI - 10.1063/1.474058
Subject(s) - chemistry , complete active space , ab initio , endothermic process , transition state , bond length , wave function , triplet state , multireference configuration interaction , binding energy , potential energy , ab initio quantum chemistry methods , configuration interaction , electronic correlation , bond cleavage , potential energy surface , molecule , atomic physics , crystallography , computational chemistry , density functional theory , physics , crystal structure , basis set , biochemistry , organic chemistry , adsorption , catalysis
To investigate the mechanism for N–H bond activation by a transition metal, the reactions of Co+(3F,5F) with NH3 have been studied with complete active space self-consistent field (CASSCF), multireference configuration interaction (MR-SDCI), and multireference many body perturbation theory (MRMP) wave functions, using both effective core potential and all-electron methods. Upon their initial approach, the reactants yield an ion–molecule complex, CoNH3+(3E,5A2,5A1), with retention of C3ν symmetry. The Co+=NH3 binding energies are estimated to be 49 (triplet) and 45 (quintet) kcal/mol. Subsequently, the N–H bond is activated, leading to an intermediate complex H–Co–NH2+ (C2ν symmetry), through a three-center transition state with an energy barrier of 56–60 (triplet) and 70–73 (quintet) kcal/mol. The energy of H–Co–NH2+, relative to that of CoNH3+, is estimated to be 60 to 61 (triplet) and 44 (quintet) kcal/mol. However, the highest levels of theory employed here (including dynamic correlation corrections) s...

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