Abstract
By use of a direct transition-state
program and the STO-3G minimal basis set, two saddle-points are detected on the
energy surface for internal motion of formamide. These correspond mainly to
rotation about the C-N bond along with some lengthening of this bond and
increased pyramidal distortion at nitrogen as compared with that in the ground
state. The STO-3G estimates of the barrier height (34-39 kJ mol-1)
are in very poor agreement with experimental values (70-90 kJ mol-1),
but 4- 31G energy evaluations for the STO-3G-optimized structures give much better
estimates (62-80 kJ mol-1). Contrary to a previous report, use of
the 4-31G extended basis set for geometry optimization suggests that only the
lower-energy member (NH2 cis to CO) of the above pair is a true
transition state for internal motion of formamide; its energy relative to that
of the 4-31G-optimized ground state (planar) is 83.5 kJ mol-1, very
close to the midpoint of the experimental range. The transition state appears
to lie in a region of the 4-31G energy surface that is relatively flat with
respect to pyramidal distortion at nitrogen; constraining the amino group to
planarity raises the calculated energy by only 6.5kJmol-1.
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