Restriction on molecular fluxionality by substitution: A case study for the 1,10‐dicyanobullvalene

Author:

Pei Bin‐Bin1,Yang Hongjuan2,Gao Cai‐Yue1,Man Yuan2,Yang Yonggang2,Li Si‐Dian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nanocluster Laboratory, Institute of Molecular Science Shanxi University Taiyuan China

2. State Key Laboratory of Quantum Optics and Quantum Optics Devices, Institute of Laser Spectroscopy Shanxi University Taiyuan China

Abstract

AbstractWe show herein that 1,10‐dicyano substitution restricts the paragon fluxionality of bullvalene to just 14 isomers which isomerize along a single cycle. The restricted fluxionality of 1,10‐dicyanobullvalene (DCB) is investigated by means of: (i) Bonding analyses of the isomer structures using the adaptive natural density partitioning (AdNDP). (ii) Quantum dynamical simulations of the isomerizations along the cyclic intrinsic reaction coordinate of the potential energy surface (PES). The PES possesses 14 equivalent potential wells supporting 14 isomers which are separated by 14 equivalent potential barriers supporting 14 transition states. Accordingly, at low temperatures, DCB appears as a hindered molecular rotor, without any delocalization of the wavefunction in the 14 potential wells, without any nuclear spin isomers, and with completely negligible tunneling. These results are compared and found to differ from those for molecular boron rotors. (iii) Born‐Oppenheimer molecular dynamics (BOMD) simulations of thermally activated isomerizations. (iv) Calculations of the rate constants in the frame of transition state theory (TST) with reasonable agreement achieved with the BOMD results. (v) Simulations of the equilibration dynamics using rate equations for the isomerizations with TST rate coefficients. Accordingly, in the long‐time limit, isomerizations of the 14 isomers, each with Cs symmetry, approach the “14 Cs → C7v” thermally averaged structure. This is a superposition of the 14 equally populated isomer structures with an overall C7v symmetry. By extrapolation, the results for DCB yield working hypotheses for so far un‐explored properties e.g. for the equilibration dynamics of C10H10.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Higher Education Discipline Innovation Project

Publisher

Wiley

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