## Receivzj i August 1967 Ab initio calculations of barriers to internal rotation in propane are carried out by a bond orbital approach. The results are in fair agreement with experiment and indicate that the rotation of the two methyl groups is not independent.
Electronic states and barriers to internal rotation in silaallenes
✍ Scribed by Karsten Krogh-jespersen
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 898 KB
- Volume
- 3
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0192-8651
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The electronic states and barriers to internal rotation in allene (1a), 1‐silaallene (2a), and 2‐silaallene (3a) are investigated computationally using ab‐initio molecular orbital methods. Planar geometries with two‐, three‐, and four‐π‐electron configurations have been considered as possible transition states (1b–3d). Structures have been optimized at the Hartree–Fock level with a small split valence basis set (3‐21G) and higher level calculations with basis sets of split valence (6‐31G) and split valence plus polarization function (6‐31G*) quality include correlation energy estimates from Møller–Plesset second‐and third‐order perturbation theory. The electronic barrier to internal rotation in allene is estimated near 53 kcal/mol whereas the corresponding barriers in 1‐silaallene and 2‐silaallene are considerably smaller, ca. 35 and 20 kcal/mol, respectively. The transition states are predicted to possess bent geometries in all three molecules with open‐shell singlet, three‐π‐electron configurations in 1 and 2 (1c, 2c) but a closed‐shell singlet, two‐π‐electron configuration in 3 (3d).
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Molecular orbital theory shows that the conformation of, and barriers to rotation in, radical ions of biphenyl derivatives are greatly different from those of the neutral compounds. The results are consistent with the ESR results on the cation radicals of some substituted biphenyis.
All electrons SCF-LCAO-MO computation for the barrier to internal rotation in allene is presented. The basis functions are contracted Gaussian orbitals. Theoretical results are discussed and related to available experimental data. In this work we report an all electron computation of the potential b