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1.
In a recent experimental work the Ir complex [Ir(cod)(py)(PCy(3))](PF(6)) (that is, Crabtree's catalyst) has been shown to catalyze the C-H arylation of electron-rich heteroarenes with iodoarenes using Ag(2)CO(3) as base. For this process, an electrophilic metalation mechanism, (S(E)Ar) has been proposed as operative mechanism rather than the concerted metalation-deprotonation (CMD) mechanism, widely implicated in Pd-catalyzed arylation reactions. Herein we have investigated the C-H activation step for several (hetero)arenes catalyzed by a Ir(III) catalyst and compared the data obtained with the results for the Pd(II)-catalyzed C-H bond activation. The calculations demonstrate that, similar to Pd(II)-catalyzed reactions, the Ir(III)-catalyzed direct C-H arylation occurs through the CMD pathway which accounts for the experimentally observed regioselectivity. The transition states for Ir(III)-catalyzed direct C-H arylation feature stronger metal-C((arene)) interactions than those for Pd(II)-catalyzed C-H arylation. The calculations also demonstrate that ligands with low trans effect may decrease the activation barrier of the C-H bond cleavage.  相似文献   

2.
The challenge of achieving selective and predictable functionalizations at C-H bonds with complex poly(hetero)aromatic substrates was addressed by two different approaches. Site-selectivity can be obtained by applying various reaction conditions that are (hetero)arene specific to substrates that contain indoles, pyridine N-oxide, and polyfluorinated benzenes. An experimental classification of electron-rich heteroarenes based on their reactivity toward palladium-catalyzed C-H functionalization was established, the result of which correlated well with the order of reactivity predicted by the DFT-calculated concerted metalation-deprotonation (CMD) pathway. Model substrates containing two reactive heteroarenes were then reacted under general reaction conditions to demonstrate the applicability this reactivity chart in predicting the regioselectivity of the palladium-catalyzed direct arylation and benzylation reactions.  相似文献   

3.
The origin of the high levels of reactivity and diastereoselectivity (>99:1 dr) observed in the oxazoline-directed, Pd(II)-catalyzed sp(3) C-H bond iodination and acetoxylation reactions as reported in previous publications has been studied and explained on the basis of experimental and computational investigations. The characterization of a trinuclear chiral C-H insertion intermediate by X-ray paved the way for further investigations into C-H insertion step through the lens of stereochemistry. Computational investigations on reactivities and diastereoselectivities of C-H activation of t-Bu- and i-Pr-substituted oxazolines provided good agreement with the experimental results. Theoretical predictions with DFT calculations revealed that C-H activation occurs at the monomeric Pd center and that the most preferred transition state for C-H activation contains two sterically bulky t-Bu substituents in anti-positions due to steric repulsion and that this transition state leads to the major diastereomer, which is consistent with the structure of the newly characterized C-H insertion intermediate. The structural information about the transition state also suggests that a minimum dihedral angle between C-H bonds and Pd-OAc bonds is crucial for C-H bond cleavage. We have also utilized density functional theory (DFT) to calculate the energies of various potential intermediates and transition states with t-Bu- and i-Pr-substituted oxazolines and suggested a possible explanation for the substantial difference in reactivity between the t-Bu- and i-Pr-substituted oxazolines.  相似文献   

4.
Zhang L  Liu Z  Li H  Fang G  Barry BD  Belay TA  Bi X  Liu Q 《Organic letters》2011,13(24):6536-6539
A novel copper-mediated chelation-assisted ortho C-H nitration of (hetero)arenes has been developed for the first time, which used dioxygen as terminal oxidant and 1,2,3-TCP as solvent, leading to the synthesis of nitroaromatics with excellent regioselectivity and in good yields. Mechanistic investigations indicate a mechanism involving a four-centered transition state, with simultaneous cleavage of an ortho C-H bond and a N-O bond of the nitrate anion on the 2-arylpyridine-coordinated copper(II) complex.  相似文献   

5.
Fagnou et al. reported direct arylation reactions that use palladium catalysts to couple Ar(1)-X to Ar(2)-H with the aid of a coordinated base. These reactions are particularly favourable for polyfluorinated arenes Ar(2)-H (see S. I. Gorelsky, D. Lapointe and K. Fagnou, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008, 130, 10848). In this paper, we show by means of a DFT analysis how the energetics and activation energies vary with fluorine substitution and examine the structures of intermediates and transition states. The reactant is modelled by Pd(OAc)(Ph)(PMe(3))(DMA) (DMA = dimethylacetamide). The sequence consists of (a) replacement of DMA by arene, (b) Concerted Deprotonation Metallation (CMD), (c) decoordination of AcOH, (d) reductive elimination of biaryl. Many of the variations are dominated by the number of fluorine substituents ortho to the C-H bond and fall into three groups labelled accordingly: Set0Fo, Set1Fo, and Set2Fo. In the first step a coordinated solvent is replaced by the arene. The arenes of Set0Fo and Set1Fo coordinate in a conventional η(2)-CH=CH mode, whereas the arenes of Set2Fo coordinate in an η(1)-CH mode assisted by an OH-C hydrogen bond from the coordinated acetate. Both the energy barriers to CMD and the product energies fall into the three typical sets with the highest barrier and highest product energy being for Set0Fo. They correlate more satisfactorily with the variations in Pd-C bond energies than with the C-H acidities. The barriers to reductive elimination from Pd(Ph)(Ar(F))(PMe(3))(AcOH) increase systematically from Set0Fo to Set2Fo as the Pd-C bond becomes stronger in a regular fashion from Set0Fo to Set2Fo. Again there is a strong correlation between the energy barriers to reductive elimination and the Pd-C bond energies. It is found overall that the key aspects of the reactions are: (a) the lowering of the energy of the CMD step by the ortho fluorine substituents, (b) the regioselective activation of C-H bonds ortho to fluorine which is also determined at the CMD step, (c) the decoordination of AcOH, which maintains the transition state for reductive elimination at low Gibbs free energy. The presence of fluorine increases the effectiveness of the reaction in the sense of points a and b via the increasing strength of the palladium-carbon bond.  相似文献   

6.
The functionalization of thiophenes is a fundamental and important reaction. Herein, we disclose iridium‐catalyzed one‐pot annulation reactions of (benzo)thiophenes with (hetero)aromatic or α,β‐unsaturated carboxylic acids, which afford thiophene‐fused coumarin‐type frameworks. Dearomatization reactions of 2‐substituted thiophenes with α,β‐unsaturated carboxylic acids deliver various thiophene‐containing spirocyclic products. The occurrence of two interconnected reactions provides direct evidence for a Heck‐type pathway. The mechanistic scenario described herein is distinctly different from the SEAr and concerted metalation–protodemetalation (CMD) pathways encountered in the well‐described oxidative C?H/C?H cross‐coupling reactions of thiophenes with other heteroarenes.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Anand M  Sunoj RB 《Organic letters》2011,13(18):4802-4805
Density functional theory investigations on the mechanism of palladium acetate catalyzed direct alkoxylation of N-methoxybenzamide in methanol reveal that the key steps involve solvent-assisted N-H as well as C-H bond activations. The transition state for the critical palladium-carbon bond formation through a concerted metalation deprotonation (CMD) process leading to a palladacycle intermediate has been found to be more stable in the methanol-assisted pathway as compared to an unassisted route.  相似文献   

9.
Alkane C-H bond activation by various catalysts and enzymes has attracted considerable attention recently, but many issues are still unanswered. The conversion of ethane to ethanol and ethene by bare [Fe(III)═O](+) has been explored using density functional theory and coupled-cluster method comprehensively. Two possible reaction mechanisms are available for the entire reaction, the direct H-abstraction mechanism and the concerted mechanism. First, in the direct H-abstraction mechanism, a direct H-abstraction is encountered in the initial step, going through a collinear transition state C···H···O-Fe and then leading to the generation of an intermediate Fe-OH bound to the alkyl radical weakly. The final product of the direct H-abstraction mechanism is ethanol, which is produced by the hydroxyl group back transfer to the carbon radical. Second, in the concerted reaction mechanism, the H-abstraction process is characterized via overcoming four/five-centered transition states (6/4)TSH_c5 or (4)TSH_c4. The second step of the concerted mechanism can lead to either product ethanol or ethene. Moreover, the major product ethene can be obtained through two different pathways, the one-step pathway and the stepwise pathway. It is the first report that the former pathway starting from (6/4)IM_c to the product can be better described as a proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET). It plays an important role in the product ethene generation according to the CCSD(T) results. The spin-orbital coupling (SOC) calculations demonstrate that the title reaction should proceed via a two-state reactivity (TSR) pattern and that the spin-forbidden transition could slightly lower the rate-determining energy barrier height. This thorough theoretical study, especially the explicit electronic structure analysis, may provide important clues for understanding and studying the C-H bond activation promoted by iron-based artificial catalysts.  相似文献   

10.
We have measured the initial probabilities of dissociative chemisorption of perhydrido and perdeutero cycloalkane isotopomers on the hexagonally close-packed Ru(001) and Ir(111) single-crystalline surfaces for surface temperatures between 250 and 1100 K. Kinetic parameters (activation barrier and preexponential factor) describing the initial, rate-limiting C-H or C-C bond cleavage reactions were quantified for each cycloalkane isotopomer on each surface. Determination of the dominant initial reaction mechanism as either initial C-C or C-H bond cleavage was judged by the presence or absence of a kinetic isotope effect between the activation barriers for each cycloalkane isotopomer pair, and also by comparison with other relevant alkane activation barriers. On the Ir(111) surface, the dissociative chemisorption of cyclobutane, cyclopentane, and cyclohexane occurs via two different reaction pathways: initial C-C bond cleavage dominates on Ir(111) at high temperature (T > approximately 600 K), while at low temperature (T < approximately 400 K), initial C-H bond cleavage dominates. On the Ru(001) surface, dissociative chemisorption of cyclopentane occurs via initial C-C bond cleavage over the entire temperature range studied, whereas dissociative chemisorption of both cyclohexane and cyclooctane occurs via initial C-H bond cleavage. Comparison of the cycloalkane C-C bond activation barriers measured here with those reported previously in the literature qualitatively suggests that the difference in ring-strain energies between the initial state and the transition state for ring-opening C-C bond cleavage effectively lowers or raises the activation barrier for dissociative chemisorption via C-C bond cleavage, depending on whether the transition state is less or more strained than the initial state. Moreover, steric arguments and metal-carbon bond strength arguments have been evoked to explain the observed trend of decreasing C-H bond activation barrier with decreasing cycloalkane ring size.  相似文献   

11.
We investigated regioselectivity in the initial C-H bond activation of propane σ-complexes on the PdO(101) surface using temperature programmed reaction spectroscopy (TPRS) experiments. We observe a significant kinetic isotope effect (KIE) in the initial C-H(D) bond cleavage of propane on PdO(101) such that the dissociation yield of C(3)H(8) is 2.7 times higher than that of C(3)D(8) at temperatures between 150 and 200 K. Measurements of the reactivity of (CH(3))(2)CD(2) and (CD(3))(2)CH(2) show that deuteration of the methyl groups is primarily responsible for the lower reactivity of C(3)D(8) relative to C(3)H(8), and thus that 1° C-H bond cleavage is the preferred pathway for propane activation on PdO(101). By analyzing the rate data within the context of a kinetic model for precursor-mediated dissociation, we estimate that 90% of the propane σ-complexes which dissociate on PdO(101) during TPRS do so by 1° C-H bond cleavage.  相似文献   

12.
We investigate palladium-induced activation of the C-H, C-C, C-F, and C-Cl bonds in methane, ethane, cyclopropane, fluoromethane, and chloromethane, using relativistic density functional theory (DFT) at ZORA-BLYP/TZ2P. Our purpose is to arrive at a qualitative understanding, based on accurate calculations, of the trends in activation barriers and transition state (TS) geometries (e.g. early or late along the reaction coordinate) in terms of the reactants' properties. To this end, we extend the activation strain model (in which the activation energy Delta E(not equal) is decomposed into the activation strain Delta E(not equal)(strain) of the reactants and the stabilizing TS interaction Delta E(not equal)(int) between the reactants) from a single-point analysis of the TS to an analysis along the reaction coordinate zeta, that is, Delta E(zeta)=Delta E(strain)(zeta)+Delta E(int)(zeta). This extension enables us to understand qualitatively, trends in the position of the TS along zeta and, therefore, the values of the activation strain Delta E(not equal)(strain)=Delta E(strain)(zeta(TS)) and TS interaction Delta E(not equal)(int)=Delta E(int)(zeta(TS)) and trends therein. An interesting insight that emerges is that the much higher barrier of metal-mediated C-C versus C-H activation originates from steric shielding of the C-C bond in ethane by C-H bonds. Thus, before a favorable stabilizing interaction with the C-C bond can occur, the C-H bonds must be bent away, which causes the metal-substrate interaction Delta E(int)(zeta) in C-C activation to lag behind. Such steric shielding is not present in the metal-mediated activation of the C-H bond, which is always accessible from the hydrogen side. Other phenomena that are addressed are anion assistance, competition between direct oxidative insertion (OxIn) versus the alternative S(N)2 pathway, and the effect of ring strain.  相似文献   

13.
[structures: see text] Ab initio and density functional calculations were employed to examine the structures and binding energies of various complexes between 2-bromolacrolein and N-tosyl-(S)-tryptophan-derived B-butyl-1,3,2-oxazaborolidin-5-one (NTOB), a catalyst commonly used for Diels-Alder reactions. Our calculations show that the chiral oxazaborolidinone catalyst serves as a tridentate complexation agent via B...O donor-acceptor, C-H...O hydrogen-bonded, and pi-stacking interactions. The most stable complex (1TS) is predicted to have a binding energy of -93 kJ mol(-1) (deltaG(298) = -29 kJ mol(-1)). The formyl C-H...O hydrogen bond and pi-stacking interaction are the key factors governing the relative stabilities of the four acrolein-NTOB complexes examined. The calculated structure and binding properties of 1TS are consistent with the experimental results on the absorption spectrum of the acrolein-NTOB complex and the effects of substituents on the reactivity of Diels-Alder reactions. 1TS differs from Corey's proposed model of transition-state assembly in two aspects: (1) it involves the s-trans-acrolein and (2) it favors a C-H...O interaction via the sulfonyl oxygen (C-H...O=S), rather than the ring oxygen (C-H...O-B). This calculated structure of the acrolein-catalyst complex provides an alternate explanation of the origin of stereoselectivity in the NTOB-catalyzed Diels-Alder reactions.  相似文献   

14.
Jones WD 《Inorganic chemistry》2005,44(13):4475-4484
Over the past 20 years, substantial progress has been made in the understanding of the activation of C-H and other strong bonds by reactive metal complexes in low oxidation states. This paper will present an overview of the use of pentamethylcyclopentadienyl and trispyrazolylborate rhodium complexes for the activation of arene and alkane C-H bonds. Insights into bond strengths, kinetic and thermodynamic selectivities, and the nature of the intermediates involved will be reviewed. The role of eta-2 arene complexes will be shown to be critical to the C-H activation reactions. Some information about the fleeting alkane sigma-complexes will also be presented. In addition, use of these complexes with thiophenes has shown the ability to cleave C-S bonds. Mechanistic information has been obtained indicating coordination through sulfur prior to cleavage. Relevant examples of nickel-based C-S cleavage will also be given.  相似文献   

15.
We used dispersion-corrected density functional theory (DFT-D3) calculations to investigate the initial C-H bond cleavage of propane σ-complexes adsorbed on the PdO(101) surface. The calculations predict that propane molecules adsorbed in η(1) configurations can undergo facile C-H bond cleavage on PdO(101), where the energy barrier for C-H bond activation is lower than that for desorption for each molecular complex. The preferred pathway for propane dissociation on PdO(101) corresponds to cleavage of a primary C-H bond of a so-called staggered p-2η(1) complex which initially coordinates with the surface by forming two H-Pd dative bonds, one at each CH(3) group. Among all of the adsorbed propane complexes, the staggered p-2η(1) complex has the highest binding energy and must overcome the lowest energy barrier for C-H bond scission. Analysis of the atomic charges reveals that propane C-H bond cleavage occurs heterolytically on PdO(101), and suggests that primary C-H bond activation is favored because a more stabilizing charge distribution develops within the 1-propyl transition state structures. Lastly, we conducted kinetic simulations using microkinetic models derived from the DFT-D3 structures, and find that the models reproduce the apparent activation energy for propane dissociation on PdO(101) to within 14% of that determined experimentally. We show that the entropic contributions of the adsorbed transition structures greatly exceed those predicted by the harmonic oscillator model, and that quantitative agreement with the apparent dissociation pre-factor may be obtained by approximating two of the frustrated adsorbate motions as free motions while treating the remaining modes as harmonic vibrations.  相似文献   

16.
The catalytic conversion of 1,2-cyclohexanediol to adipic anhydride by Ru(IV)O(tpa) (tpa ═ tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine) is discussed using density functional theory calculations. The whole reaction is divided into three steps: (1) formation of α-hydroxy cyclohexanone by dehydrogenation of cyclohexanediol, (2) formation of 1,2-cyclohexanedione by dehydrogenation of α-hydroxy cyclohexanone, and (3) formation of adipic anhydride by oxygenation of cyclohexanedione. In each step the two-electron oxidation is performed by Ru(IV)O(tpa) active species, which is reduced to bis-aqua Ru(II)(tpa) complex. The Ru(II) complex is reactivated using Ce(IV) and water as an oxygen source. There are two different pathways of the first two steps of the conversion depending on whether the direct H-atom abstraction occurs on a C-H bond or on its adjacent oxygen O-H. In the first step, the C-H (O-H) bond dissociation occurs in TS1 (TS2-1) with an activation barrier of 21.4 (21.6) kcal/mol, which is followed by abstraction of another hydrogen with the spin transition in both pathways. The second process also bifurcates into two reaction pathways. TS3 (TS4-1) is leading to dissociation of the C-H (O-H) bond, and the activation barrier of TS3 (TS4-1) is 20.2 (20.7) kcal/mol. In the third step, oxo ligand attack on the carbonyl carbon and hydrogen migration from the water ligand occur via TS5 with an activation barrier of 17.4 kcal/mol leading to a stable tetrahedral intermediate in a triplet state. However, the slightly higher energy singlet state of this tetrahedral intermediate is unstable; therefore, a spin crossover spontaneously transforms the tetrahedral intermediate into a dione complex by a hydrogen rebound and a C-C bond cleavage. Kinetic isotope effects (k(H)/k(D)) for the electronic processes of the C-H bond dissociations calculated to be 4.9-7.4 at 300 K are in good agreement with experiment values of 2.8-9.0.  相似文献   

17.
Monoprotected chiral amino acids have recently been established as a class of ligand scaffolds for effecting Pd-catalyzed enantioselective C-H bond activation reactions. However, to elucidate the mechanistic details and controlling factors of these reactions, more comprehensive studies are needed. In this work we report computational investigations into the key mechanistic features of enantioselective C-H bond activation reactions catalyzed by a [chiral (mono-N-protected amino acid)-Pd(II)] complex. Structural analysis points to a C-H insertion intermediate in which the nitrogen atom of the ligand is bound as a neutral σ-donor. The formation of this C-H insertion intermediate could, in principle, proceed via a "direct C-H cleavage" or via "initial N-H bond cleavage followed by C-H cleavage". The computational studies presented herein show that the pathway initiated by N-H bond cleavage is more kinetically favorable. It is shown that the first step of the reaction is the N-H bond cleavage by the coordinated acetate group (OAc). In the next stage, the weakly coordinated OAc(-) (the second acetate group) activates the ortho-C-H bond of the substrate and transfers the H-atom from the C-atom to the bound N-atom of the ligand. As a result, a new Pd-C bond is formed and the carbamate is converted from X-type to L-type ligand. The absolute configuration of the products that are predicted on the basis of the calculated energies of the transition states matches the experimental data. The calculated enantioselectivity is also comparable with the experimental result. On the basis of these data, the origin of the enantioselectivity can be largely attributed to steric repulsions in the transition states.  相似文献   

18.
A theoretical study of alcohol oxidation by ferrate   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The conversion of methanol to formaldehyde mediated by ferrate (FeO(4)2-), monoprotonated ferrate (HFeO4-), and diprotonated ferrate (H2FeO4) is discussed with the hybrid B3LYP density functional theory (DFT) method. Diprotonated ferrate is the best mediator for the activation of the O-H and C-H bonds of methanol via two entrance reaction channels: (1) an addition-elimination mechanism that involves coordination of methanol to diprotonated ferrate; (2) a direct abstraction mechanism that involves H atom abstraction from the O-H or C-H bond of methanol. Within the framework of the polarizable continuum model (PCM), the energetic profiles of these reaction mechanisms in aqueous solution are calculated and investigated. In the addition-elimination mechanism, the O-H and C-H bonds of ligating methanol are cleaved by an oxo or hydroxo ligand, and therefore the way to the formation of formaldehyde is branched into four reaction pathways. The most favorable reaction pathway in the addition-elimination mechanism is initiated by an O-H cleavage via a four-centered transition state that leads to intermediate containing an Fe-O bond, followed by a C-H cleavage via a five-centered transition state to lead to formaldehyde complex. In the direct abstraction mechanism, the oxidation reaction can be initiated by a direct H atom abstraction from either the O-H or C-H bond, and it is branched into three pathways for the formation of formaldehyde. The most favorable reaction pathway in the direct abstraction mechanism is initiated by C-H activation that leads to organometallic intermediate containing an Fe-C bond, followed by a concerted H atom transfer from the OH group of methanol to an oxo ligand of ferrate. The first steps in both mechanisms are all competitive in energy, but due to the significant energetical stability of the organometallic intermediate, the most likely initial reaction in methanol oxidation by ferrate is the direct C-H bond cleavage.  相似文献   

19.
Small change matters: T-shaped Pt(II) complexes with less flexible substituents, than, for example, isopropyl or tert-butyl groups, on N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligands allow for C-H bond activation reactions of aromatic compounds (see scheme; BAr(f)(4)(-) =tetrakis[(3,5-trifluoromethyl)phenyl]borate; F yellow, Pt red). NHC substituents that are not highly branched prevent agostic interactions and reduce the barriers to achieve the C-H bond cleavage.  相似文献   

20.
The oxygen insertion into C-H bonds (of methane, isobutane, and acetone) by dioxiranes (parent dioxirane and dimethyldioxirane) to give alcohols was studied with the DFT theory, using both restricted and unrestricted B3LYP methods, and 6-31G(d) and 6-311+G(d,p) basis sets to evaluate the feasibility of stepwise mechanisms and their competition with the concerted counterpart. Confirming previous results by other authors, we have located, with the RB3LYP method, concerted TSs in which the oxygen bound to be inserted interacts very strongly with the hydrogen atom and very weakly with the carbon atom of the C-H bond. These TSs nicely explain all the experimental observations (e.g., configuration retention at the chiral centers), but all of them exhibit an RHF --> UHF wave function instability that preclude considering them as genuine transition structures. We also were able to characterize, with UB3LYP methods, two alternative two-step processes that can lead to final products (alcohol + carbonyl compound) via singlet radical pair intermediates. For the first step of both processes we located genuine diradicaloid TSs, namely, TSs rad,coll and TSs rad,perp, that have stable wave functions. In TSs rad,coll the alkane C-H bond tends to be collinear with the breaking O(1)- - -O(2) bond while in TSs rad,perp the alkane C-H bond is almost perpendicular to the O(1)- - -O(2) bond. The first step, of both processes, can represent an example of a "molecule induced homolysis" reaction: collision between alkane and dioxirane brings about the homolytic cleavage of the dioxirane O-O bond and the hydrogen abstraction follows afterward to produce the diradicaloid TS that then falls down to a singlet radical pair. This hypothesis was fully confirmed by IRC analysis in the case of TSs rad,coll. The possible pathways that lead from the intermediate radical pair to final products are discussed as well as the hypothesis that the radical collinear TSs may collapse directly to products in a "one-step nonconcerted" process. However, diradical mechanisms cannot explain the experimental data as satisfactorily as the concerted pathway does. As for computational predictions about competition of diradical vs concerted mechanisms, they strongly depend (i) on the alkane C-H type, (ii) on whether gas phase or solution is considered, and (iii) on the basis set used for calculations. In short, the concerted TS benefits, with respect to the corresponding diradicaloid TSs, of alkyl substitution at the C-H center, solvation effects, and basis set extension. Actually, in the case of DMD reactions with methane and acetone, the diradicaloid TSs are always (both in gas phase and in solution and with both the basis sets used) strongly favored over their concerted counterpart. In the case of DMD reaction with isobutane tertiary C-H bond the large favor for the diradicaloid TSs over the concerted TS, predicted in gas phase by the B3LYP/6-31G(d) method, progressively decreases as a result of basis set extension and introduction of solvent effects: the higher theory level [B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p)] suggests that in acetone solution TS conc has almost the same energy as TS rad,perp while TS rad,coll resides only 2 kcal/mol higher.  相似文献   

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