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Predicting the tautomeric equilibrium of acetylacetone in solution. I. The right answer for the wrong reason?
Author(s) -
Schlund Sebastian,
Basílio Janke Eline M.,
Weisz Klaus,
Engels Bernd
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of computational chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.907
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1096-987X
pISSN - 0192-8651
DOI - 10.1002/jcc.21354
Subject(s) - acetylacetone , tautomer , enol , chemistry , solvent effects , solvent , basis set , computational chemistry , thermodynamics , valence (chemistry) , basis (linear algebra) , density functional theory , organic chemistry , physics , mathematics , geometry , catalysis
This study investigates how the various components (method, basis set, and treatment of solvent effects) of a theoretical approach influence the relative energies between keto and enol forms of acetylacetone, which is an important model system to study the solvent effects on chemical equilibria from experiment and theory. The computations show that the most popular density functional theory (DFT) approaches, such as B3LYP overestimate the stability of the enol form with respect to the keto form by ∼10 kJ mol −1 , whereas the very promising SCS‐MP2 approach is underestimating it. MP2 calculations indicate that in particular the basis set size is crucial. The Dunning Huzinaga double ζ basis (D95z(d,p)) used in previous studies overestimates the stability of the keto form considerably as does the popular split‐valence plus polarization (SVP) basis. Bulk properties of the solvent included by continuum approaches strongly stabilize the keto form, but they are not sufficient to reproduce the reversal in stabilities measured by low‐temperature nuclear magnetic resonance experiments in freonic solvents. Enthalpic and entropic effects further stabilize the keto form, however, the reversal is only obtained if also molecular effects are taken into account. Such molecular effects seem to influence only the energy difference between the keto and the enol forms. Trends arising due to variation in the dielectric constant of the solvent result from bulk properties of the solvent, i.e., are already nicely described by continuum approaches. As such this study delivers a deep insight into the abilities of various approaches to describe solvent effects on chemical equilibria. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Comput Chem, 2010

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