DEGENERATE LITHIUM-HYDROGEN EXCHANGE-REACTIONS - AN ALTERNATIVE MECHANISM FOR METALATION OF CH4 IN GAS-PHASE AND TETRAHYDROFURAN SOLUTION

Citation
El. Coitino et al., DEGENERATE LITHIUM-HYDROGEN EXCHANGE-REACTIONS - AN ALTERNATIVE MECHANISM FOR METALATION OF CH4 IN GAS-PHASE AND TETRAHYDROFURAN SOLUTION, The journal of physical chemistry. A, Molecules, spectroscopy, kinetics, environment, & general theory, 102(43), 1998, pp. 8369-8376
Citations number
54
Categorie Soggetti
Chemistry Physical
ISSN journal
10895639
Volume
102
Issue
43
Year of publication
1998
Pages
8369 - 8376
Database
ISI
SICI code
1089-5639(1998)102:43<8369:DLE-AA>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
We report here the results of an ab initio study of the lithium-hydrog en exchange reaction of CH4 + (CH3Li)(2) both in gas phase and in tetr ahydrofuran (THF) solution. All the species involved in the reaction h ave been characterized at the Hartree-Fock, second-order Moller-Plesse t (MP2)(full), and density functional theory (B3LYP) levels using the 6-31G(d,p) basis set. The effect of the solvent (THF) has been modeled using the Polarizable Continuum Model developed by the group in Pisa that includes both electrostatic and nonelectrostatic (cavitation and dispersion repulsion terms) contributions to the solvation energy. A m ain result of this study is the finding of a nonplanar transition stat e structure that leads to a barrier similar to 2 kcal/mol lower at the MP2 level than the one calculated based on a C-s six-membered ring tr ansition state previously reported by Schleyer et al. for the same rea ction (J. Comput. Chem. 10, 437 (1989)). We include here a detailed di scussion of the differences between these two mechanistic alternatives and the effect of the solvent on both of them. The performance of the B3LYP hybrid functional is examined against our MP2 results to assess whether this methodology is reliable for the study of more complex me talation reactions in which the size of the reactant system prevents t he use of MP2 methods as a way for including electron correlation.