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Chemical reactivity from an activation strain perspective

Authors :
F. Matthias Bickelhaupt
Trevor A. Hamlin
Pascal Vermeeren
Source :
Vermeeren, P, Hamlin, T A & Bickelhaupt, F M 2021, ' Chemical reactivity from an activation strain perspective ', Chemical Communications, vol. 57, no. 48, pp. 5880-5896 . https://doi.org/10.1039/d1cc02042k, Chemical Communications (Cambridge, England), Chemical Communications, 57, 48, pp. 5880-5896, Chemical Communications, 57, 5880-5896
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Chemical reactions are ubiquitous in the universe, they are at the core of life, and they are essential for industrial processes. The drive for a deep understanding of how something occurs, in this case, the mechanism of a chemical reaction and the factors controlling its reactivity, is intrinsically valuable and an innate quality of humans. The level of insight and degree of understanding afforded by computational chemistry cannot be understated. The activation strain model is one of the most powerful tools in our arsenal to obtain unparalleled insight into reactivity. The relative energy of interacting reactants is evaluated along a reaction energy profile and related to the rigidity of the reactants’ molecular structure and the strength of the stabilizing interactions between the deformed reactants: ΔE(ζ) = ΔEstrain(ζ) + ΔEint(ζ). Owing to the connectedness between the activation strain model and Kohn–Sham molecular orbital theory, one is able to obtain a causal relationship between both the sterics and electronics of the reactants and their mutual reactivity. Only when this is accomplished one can eclipse the phenomenological explanations that are commonplace in the literature and textbooks and begin to rationally tune and optimize chemical transformations. We showcase how the activation strain model is the ideal tool to elucidate fundamental organic reactions, the activation of small molecules by metallylenes, and the cycloaddition reactivity of cyclic diene- and dipolarophiles.<br />The activation strain model is a universal tool in the chemist's arsenal to unravel the factors controlling reactivity and selectivity of any chemical transformation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13597345
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Vermeeren, P, Hamlin, T A & Bickelhaupt, F M 2021, ' Chemical reactivity from an activation strain perspective ', Chemical Communications, vol. 57, no. 48, pp. 5880-5896 . https://doi.org/10.1039/d1cc02042k, Chemical Communications (Cambridge, England), Chemical Communications, 57, 48, pp. 5880-5896, Chemical Communications, 57, 5880-5896
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eaf42355353dd3f7e93377dec967a571
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d1cc02042k