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1Breathing Orbital Valence Bond (BOVB)
A Valence Bond Method incorporating static an
dynamic clectron correlation effects
2The Molecular Orbital model
? 1s 1s j? j? j? j? j? j? j? j? ?
Y??
Electron pairs are in delocalized orbitals
3The Valence Bond model
electron pairs are in local bonds
one bond an interaction between two singly
occupied atomic orbitals
The C-H bond is mainly covalent, but also has
some minor ionic character
The Valence bond wave function is the Quantum
Mechanical translation of the Lewis structure
4Systems that cannot be described by A single
Lewis structure
- Molecules displaying electron conjugation
The VB wave function Y(1?2) for the ground
state is a combination of two VB structures Y1
and Y2
Y(1?2) C1(Y1) C2(Y2)
One can calculate the energy of a single VB
structure 1 or 2 (diabatic state). Application
Calculation of resonance stabilizations in
chemistry
RE E(1) - E(1?2)
5Systems that cannot be described by A single
Lewis structure
- Transition states of reactions
Example
A BC ???ABC? ????AB C
ABC? is a resonating mixture of two VB
structures
A // BC ? AB // C
Image of the reactants
Image of products
- The VB method can
- calculate the energy of each of these
- VB structures for any given geometry,
- - calculate the resonance energy
6Application VB curve-crossing diagrams
The higher the G value, the higher the reaction
barrier
G is a property of the reactants
7Covalent structures, ionic structures
- ExampleSN2 transition state
X H3CY ???XCH3Y ????XCH3 Y
XCH3Y
- Ionic vs covalent structures are clearly defined
- only if electrons are in atomic orbitals
8What kind of VB method do we need?
- A compact wave function
- Not more than one VB function per Lewis
structure
- A wave function which is clearly interpretable
- The VB functions must use pure atomic
orbitals, - so that they clearly correspond to one given
- Lewis structure
- Accuracy of the calculated energetics
- The VB methos must be able to accurately
- describe the elementary process of a reaction
- bond breaking or bond making
- Necessity of well taking electron correlation
- into account
9Electron correlation in VB Theory
- Exemple the H2 molecule (Heitler-London, 1927)
Working hypothesis the electrons remain in
atomic orbitals
At equilibrium distance, 2 possible déterminants
?ja jb ?
?jb ja ?
Correct wave function (for the covalent bond)
?ja jb ?
?jb ja ?
YHL
10Calculated dissociation energy curve
?ja jb ?
?jb ja ?
YHL ?
-20
-40
-60
-80
-100
Physical origin of the bond spin exchange
between AOs
11Comparaison with MO description (Hartree-Fock)
YHF ??g ?g ?
??g ?g ?? ??a ?b ??? ??b ?a ??????? ??????a ?a
??? ??b ?b ??
HH
HH HH
??g ?g ?? 50 covalent 50 ionic
YHL 100 covalent
72-79 covalent 21-28 ionic
12Dissociation curve OM (YHF) vs VB (YHL)
E
(kcal)
50 covalent 50 ionic
R
HH
-20
-40
Y
H
F
-60
100 covalent
Y
HL
-80
-100
Y
exact
Hartree-Fock does not dissociate well
13Exact description
Yexact ????a ?b ??? ??b ?a ???? ?????a ?a ???
??b ?b ???
HH
HH HH
??g ?g ?? ??a ?b ??? ??b ?a ??????? ??????a ?a
??? ??b ?b ??
??u ?u ?? ??a ?b ??? ??b ?a ??????- ??????a ?a
??? ??b ?b ??
C1 ??g ?g ???? C2 ??u ?u ?? Yexact
14The Generalized Valence Bond Method (GVB)
         Â
YGVB ?????????a ?b ??? ??b ?a ???? ??????a ?a
??? ??b ?b ???
HH
HH HH
YGVB is formally covalent, but physically
covalent-ionic optimized
15Features of the various methods
Test case the description of F2
FF
Nature of the wave function for F2
- Hartree-Fock too much ionic
-
FF FF
FF
Optimized covalent vs ionic coefficients
16Accuracy of the various methods
Test case the dissociation of F2
?E
FF F F
Calculation of ?E for F-F1.43Ã…, 6-31G(d) basis
- Hartree-Fock - 37 kcal/mol (repulsive!)
- Reason too much ionic
-
- Full configuration interaction (6-31-G(d) basis)
- 30-33 kcal/mol
Only 15.7 kcal/mol
Reason ??
17What is wrong with GVB and VBSCF?
- They provide optimized covalent-ionic
- coefficients
- They greatly underestimate bond strength
GVB/VBSCF a closer examination
FF FF
FF
- The orbitals are optimized, but
- The same set of AOs is used for all VB
structures - optimized for a mean neutral situation
A better wave function
18The  Breathing-Orbital VB method (BOVB)
- Provides optimized covalent-ionic coefficients
- (like GVB)
FF
FF FF
- Different orbitals for different VB structures
- Orbitals for FF will be the same as VBSCF
- Orbitals for ionic structures will be much
improved
- One expects
- A better description of ionic structures
- A better bonding energy
19The  Breathing-Orbital VB method (BOVB)
Test case the dissociation of F2
?E
FF F F
Calculation of ?E for F-F1.43Ã…, 6-31G(d) basis
Iteration De(kcal) FF FF ?
FF Classical VB -4.6 0.813 0.187 1 24.6 0.73
1 0.269 2 27.9 0.712 0.288 3 28.4 0.709 0.2
91 4 28.5 0.710 0.290 5 28.6 0.707 0.293
GVB 15.7 0.768 0.232
20Improvements of the BOVB method
- Improvement of the ionic VB structures
- - basic level
- improved level ( split-level  or S)
The  active orbital is split. This brings
radial electron correlation
21Improvements of the BOVB method
- Improvement of the interactions between
- spectator orbitals
- Spectator orbitals can be
- local atomic orbitals
- bonding and antibonding combinations
Slightly better ( Delocalized level or D)
22The three levels of the BOVB method
- All orbitals are localized, ionics are
closed-shell
- All orbitals are localized, but active orbitals
in - ionics are split
- Active orbitals are split in ionics
- Spectator orbitals are delocalized in all
structures
23Performances of the various BOVB levels
Test case the dissociation of F2
?E
FF F F
Method Req (Ã…) De(kcal/mol) 6-31G
basis set GVB 1.506 14.0
CASSCF 1.495 16.4 L-BOVB 1.485 27.9
SL-BOVB 1.473 31.4 SD-BOVB 1.449 33.9 Estim
ated full CI __ 30-33 Dunning-Huzinaga
DZP basis set SD-BOVB 1.443 31.6 Estimated
full CI 1.440.005 28-31 Experimental 1.41
2 38.3
24Performances of the various BOVB levels
A polar molecule the dissociation of FH
?E
FH F H
Method Req (Ã…) De(kcal/mol) 6-31G
basis set GVB 0.920 113.4
L-BOVB 0.918 121.4 SL-BOVB 0.911 133.5
SD-BOVB 0.906 136.3 Bauschlicher Taylor
DZP basis set SD-BOVB 0.906 136.5 Full
CI 0.921 136.3 Experimental 0.917 14
1.1 Full CI and SD-BOVB dissociation curves are
indistinguishable within less than one kcal/mol
25Electron correlation in BOVB
- Non dynamic correlation gives the correct
- ionic/covalent ratio for the bonds.
GVB (or valence CASSCF) has all the non
dynamic correlation
- All the rest. This is what is missing in GVB.
- BOVB brings that part of dynamic correlation
- that varies in the reaction
26What is an accurate description of two-electron
bonding?
- Spin exchange between two atomic orbitals
-
- Electrons are on different atoms and they
- exchange their positions
- Sometimes both electrons are on the same atom.
- There is some charge fluctuation. All orbitals
- instantaneously rearrange in size and shape to
follow - the charge fluctuation (orbitals  breathe ).
- This is differential dynamic correlation
27Three-electron bonds (or (3e,2c) bonds)
- Example the cation dimer of NH3
H3NNH3
H3NNH3
Noted H3N?NH3
- Other examples
- Any molecule that has a lone pair can dimerize
, etc
- Very frequent in biochemistry the
three-electron - sulfur-sulfur linkage R2S?SR2
28Electron correlation in (3e,2c) bonds
Example the helium cation dimer He2
YMO ??g ?g ?u ??
??a ?a ?b ?
??a ?b ?b ?
- Equivalence of qualitative MO and VB pictures
??g ?g ?u ??? ??a ?a ?b ??? ??a ?b ?b ????YVB
There is no left-right correlation in (3e,2c)
bonding Electron correlation is all dynamic
correlation
29Importance of electron correlation in (3e,2c)
bonds
Test case the dissociation of 3e-bonded cations
?E
X?X X X
?E(kcal/mol)
Hartree-Fock MP2 MP4 He?He 34 39 43
H3N?NH3 24 40 39 H2O?OH2 23 46 44
HF?FH 20 48 45 Ne?Ne 9 39 37
H3P?PH3 19 27 27 H2S?SH2 20 30 30
HCl?ClH 17 30 29 Ar?Ar 11 24 24
Huge dynamic correlation!
30The BOVB description of three-electron bonds
Example F2 (F?F)
F F
F F
Same orbitals for both VB structures
All the bond is made of charge fluctuation A
large stabilization is expected
Question does the breathing orbital effect
bring all the dynamic correlation associated to
the bond?
31Performances of BOVB for 3-electron bonds
Test case the dissociation of the F2 anion
De - 4 kcal/mol (repulsive!)
- Breathing active orbitals
De 13.3 kcal/mol
- Fully Breathing (active and spectator orbitals)
De 28.0 kcal/mol (experiment 30.2)
32Some features of the BOVB method
- Compactness
- Only a few VB structures one per Lewis
structure - necessary to represent the electronic state
- Accuracy
- Yield reasonably accurate dissociation curves
- as compared to full CI levels in the same
basis set
- Interpretability
- VB structures have a clear physical meaning,
- owing to the use of pure AOs
- Electron correlation
- gives non-dynamic correlation,
- and differential dynamic correlation, which
closely - corresponds to the  breathing orbital effectÂ
- Suitable for calculating diabatic states
- May calculate the energy of a single VB
structure, - or the energy curve of a VB structure along a
reaction
33An application of VB curve-crossing diagrams
Breaking of alkoxy radicals in the low atmosphere
- Importance for atmospheric pollution (cities)
- Endothermic reactions. DH depends on Ri
- The barrier DE? also depends an Ri
- DH and DE? are related in a strange way
34Degradation of alkoxy radicals
- Prediction of the Hammond postulate
DE? should be a linear function of DH
- Experimentally, two different laws
- If one stabilizes the products by substituting
R1 - DE? 1.20 DH cte (law 1 )
- If one stabilizes the products by substituting
CO - DE? 0.4 DH cte (law 2 )
35VB curve-crossing diagram
36If one substitutes R1
- DE? decreases about as much as DH
- (law 1)
37If one substitutes the carbonyl
DH P?P
H2CO ???? 97.6 MeHCO 13.7
107.8 Me2CO 10.4 114.9
DH decreases but the gap P ? P increases. DE?
does not decrease much law 2
38Why does the gap P ? P increase upon carbonyl
substitution?
1
2
- Effect of R on the triplet state 1
- The doubly occupied p MO of R conjugates with
- the carbonyls p electrons
Repulsion is proportional to the number of
neighboring parallel spins. Conjugation does not
increase repulsion
- Effect of R on the non-bonding state 2
Conjugation increases repulsion
P is destabilized, P ? P increase
39Generalization the two relations DE? f(DH) for
alkoxy decomposition
- If one subtitutes R1 law 1
DE?
n
2
n
0
n
1
H
H
H
DH
- If one subtitutes the carbonyl law 2
m
e
t
h
y
l
R
1
p
r
o
p
y
l
R
1
e
t
h
y
l
R
1
l
)
DE?
i
-
p
r
o
p
y
l
R
1
t
-
b
u
t
y
l
R
1
DH
40Acknowledgements
Prof. Wei Wu Kunming Dong Lingchun Song
Sason Shaik David Danovitch Avital Shurki