Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5417311 | Journal of Molecular Structure: THEOCHEM | 2009 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The dissociation KL â K· + L· of molecules KL in their hypothetical vibrationless state at 0 K is described and a new formula is derived for their enthalpy of formation, ÎHfâ(KL). Each individual molecule is viewed as two electroneutral parts, Kâ and Lâ, joined by a bond with intrinsic energy εkl (with k â K, l â L). Kâ and Lâ are the precursors of the radicals K· and L·, respectively, as they occur in symmetrical molecules KK and LL. (The Kâ of a methyl group, for example, is that found in ethane.) Each part is entirely defined by a number, F(K·), that can be evaluated from the energies of the bonds found in Kâ. The formula is ÎHfâ(KL)=F(K·)+F(L·)+Z(KL)-εkl-CNE+EnbKL, where Z(KL) = ZPE + HT â H0 is the zero-point plus heat-content energy of KL. The “Charge Neutralization Energy”, CNE, accounts for any possible electronic charge transfer that may have occurred between K and L, and combines the energy increase of the donor with the energy lowering on the other side, which tends to keep CNE small to the point that CNE = 0 is an acceptable approximation for many pairs {Kâ,Lâ}. EnbKL stands for Coulomb non-bonded interactions between the atoms of K and those of L. Detailed examples, which include the calculation of the relevant bond energies, reveal the merits and the limitations of this extremely simple, though exact, formulation of ÎHfâ(KL).
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Authors
Sándor Fliszár,