A theoretical study of the mechanism of the addition reaction between carbene and azacyclopropane
Author(s) -
Xiaojun Tan,
Ping Li,
Weihua Wang,
Gengxiu Zheng,
Qiufen Wang
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of the serbian chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.227
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1820-7421
pISSN - 0352-5139
DOI - 10.2298/jsc090303031t
Subject(s) - carbene , exothermic reaction , chemistry , potential energy surface , reaction mechanism , energy profile , basis set , perturbation theory (quantum mechanics) , atom (system on chip) , computational chemistry , activation energy , activation barrier , transition state , molecule , density functional theory , physics , energy (signal processing) , organic chemistry , catalysis , quantum mechanics , computer science , embedded system
The mechanism of the addition reaction between carbene and azacyclopropane was investigated using the second-order Moller―Plesset perturbation theory (MP2). By using the 6-311+G * basis set, geometry optimization, vibrational analysis and the energy properties of the involved stationary points on the potential energy surface were calculated. From the surface energy profile, it can be predicted that there are two reaction mechanisms. The first one (1) is carbene attack at the N atom of azacyclopropane to form an intermediate, la (IM1a), which is a barrier-free exothermic reaction. Then, IM1a can isomerize to IMlb via a transition state la (TS1a), in which the potential barrier is 30.0 kJ/mol. Subsequently, IM1b isomerizes to a product (Pro1) via TS1b with a potential barrier of 39.3 kJ/mol. The other one (2) is carbene attack at the C atom of azacyclopropane, firstly to form IM2 via TS2a, the potential barrier is 35.4 kJ/mol. Then IM2 isomerizes to a product (Pro2) via TS2b with a potential barrier of 35.1 kJ/mol. Correspondingly, the reaction energy for the reactions (1) and (2) is ―478.3 and ―509.9 kJ/mol, respectively. Additionally, the orbital interactions are also discussed for the leading intermediate.
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