Computed vs Experimental Energy Barriers in Solution: Influence of the type of the density functional approximation.

20 March 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Mechanistic investigations at the Density Functional Theory (DFT) level of organic and organometallic reactions in solution are now broadly accessible and routinely implemented to complement experimental investigations. The selection of an appropriate functional among the plethora of developed ones is the first challenge on the way to reliable energy barrier calculations. To provide guidelines for the choice of an initial and reliable computational level, the performances of commonly used non-empirical (PBE, PBE0, PBE0-DH) and empirical density functionals (BLYP, B3LYP, B2PLYP) were evaluated relative to experimental activation enthalpies. Most reactivity databases to assess density functional performances are primarily based on high level calculations, here a set of experimental activation enthalpies of organic and organometallic reactions performed in solution were selected from the literature. As a general trend, the non-empirical functionals outperform the empirical ones. The most accurate energy barriers are obtained with hybride PBE0 and double-hybrid PBE0-DH density functionals, both providing similar performance. Regardless of the functional under consideration, the addition of the GD3-BJ empirical dispersion correction does not enhance the accuracy of computed energy barriers.

Keywords

DFT
Solvation
Dispersion
Density Functionals
Kinetics

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Supporting Information
Description
Additional data regarding i) influence of the addition of empirical dispersion; ii) Influence of geometry reoptimization; iii) Influence Basis Set Superposition Error (BSSE); iv)Influence of the basis set.
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Cartesian coordinates of all optimized structures
Description
Cartesian coordinates of all optimized structures
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