Abstract
This study introduces a methodology that combines accelerated molecular dynamics and Mean Force Integration (MFI) to investigate solvent effects on chemical reaction kinetics. The newly developed methodology is applied to the $\beta$-scission of Butyl Acrylate (BA) dimer in polar (water) and non-polar (xylene, BA monomer) solvents. The results show that solvation in both polar and non-polar environments reduces the free energy barrier of activation by $\sim$ 4 [kcal/mol] and decreases the pre-exponential factor twofold. Employing a hybrid QM/MM approach with explicit solvent modelling, we compute kinetic rate constants that better match experimental measurements compared to gas-phase calculations. This methodology presents promising potential for accurately predicting kinetic rate constants in liquid-phase polymerization and depolymerization processes.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Material: Unveiling solvent effects on β-scissions through Metadynamics and Mean Force Integration
Description
This document gathers the supplementary material regarding the convergence of the Helmholtz free energy estimates calculated through standard metadynamics and Mean Force Integration. Section A shows the results obtained at T=410K in vacuum and in the various solvents analized in this work, namely BA monomer, Xylene and water. Section B, reports the marginal free energy pofiles along the effective reaction coordinate (C-C distance) and the related global convergence of the bootstrap error in the same conditions as the bidimentional case. Finally, Section C reports the convergence of the marginal free energy profile in just one case with respect to the number of gridpoints used for that discretize the integration domain.
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GitHub Repository
Description
Repository including simulation results of collective variables and Jupyter Notebooks used for postprocessing the results.
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