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Density Functional Theory Study of Reaction Equilibria in Signal Amplification by Reversible Exchange
Authors:Kailai Lin  Patrick TomHon  Dr. Sören Lehmkuhl  Dr. Raul Laasner  Prof. Thomas Theis  Prof. Volker Blum
Affiliation:1. Department of Chemistry, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708 USA;2. Department of Chemistry, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27606 USA;3. Thomas Lord Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708 USA
Abstract:An in-depth theoretical analysis of key chemical equilibria in Signal Amplification by Reversible Exchange (SABRE) is provided, employing density functional theory calculations to characterize the likely reaction network. For all reactions in the network, the potential energy surface is probed to identify minimum energy pathways. Energy barriers and transition states are calculated, and harmonic transition state theory is applied to calculate exchange rates that approximate experimental values. The reaction network energy surface can be modulated by chemical potentials that account for the dependence on concentration, temperature, and partial pressure of molecular constituents (hydrogen, methanol, pyridine) supplied to the experiment under equilibrium conditions. We show that, under typical experimental conditions, the Gibbs free energies of the two key states involved in pyridine-hydrogen exchange at the common Ir-IMes catalyst system in methanol are essentially the same, i. e., nearly optimal for SABRE. We also show that a methanol-containing intermediate is plausible as a transient species in the process.
Keywords:computational chemistry  density functional calculations  hyperpolarization  NMR spectroscopy  reaction mechanisms  parahydrogen
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