VBTutorial4
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BLW method & HuLiS program
To the tutors |
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Sason remarks and prospective 2 hours talk
Philippe's remark on the initially proposed tutorial. are included in bold. Qualitative
Computational Proposal from Yirong
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BLW within GAMESS (Version: MAR-25-2010 R2) |
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BLW is provided by Yirong Mo (Western Michigan University - USA). It allows to optimize local wave function. Gradients are available for geometry optimization. DFT approaches allow to include a part of correlation into the structure. Structures can interact with $BLWCI group. During the workshop, a BLW computation of file.inp is obtained with the command "blwrun file " file.log and file.blw are in the current directory. |
HuLiS : a Huckel-based code |
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HuLiS is provided by Stephane Humbel (Aix-Marseille Université - France). This is a graphical java applet that deals with Huckel and Lewis structures. It computes coefficients and weights of mesomeric structures through two different approaches: the energy related approach is a simulated CI (HL-CI - deprecated); the wave function approach is a projection of Lewis structures onto a Huckel derived wave function(HLP). This second approach is more reliable. HuLiS is launch with the command "java -jar ~/bin/hulis.jar" or via the web site HuLiS Details of the principles are written at HL-CI and HLP explanations. Seminal papers are HL-CI and HLP. |
Paper Exercices | ||
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Here are two HuLiS exercices : find the weights in formamide with HL-CI and use HLP to get coefficients for the allyl radical. Formamide with HL-CIFormamide can be written as a resonance between two Lewis strutures. We shall find the weights of this scheme using HL-CI. In HL-CI we define an effective CI hamiltonian that concerns the interaction between the (localized) Lewis structures <math> \Psi_{I}</math> and <math> \Psi_{II}</math>: <math> \Psi_{HL-CI}=c_{I}\Psi_{I}+c_{II}\Psi_{II}</math>. This CI must give the Huckel energy of the delocalized wave function. <math> E_{HL-CI}=E_{Huckel}</math>
<math> \Psi_{HL-CI}=0.81\Psi_{I}+0.58\Psi_{II}</math>, hence the weights of the structures (I/II)=(66%/34%) Note that in HL-CI <math><Psi_{I}|\Psi_{II}>=0</math>
Allyl Radical with HLPAllyl radical can be written as a resonance between two Lewis strutures: <math> \Psi_{HLP}=c_{I}\Psi_{I}+c_{II}\Psi_{II}</math>. We shall find the coefficients of this CI via HLP. The Huckel orbitals are considered as :
In the following the Huckel wave function is expressed as a Salter determinant: <math> \Psi_{Huckel}=|\phi_{1}\bar{\phi_{1}}\phi_2|</math> In the HLP scheme we search the coefficient of the structures I and II by projection of the Huckel wave function onto the localized structures <math> \Psi_{I}=|\pi_{12}\bar{\pi_{12}}p_3|</math> and <math>\Psi_{II}=|p_1\pi_{23}\bar{\pi_{23}}|</math>. Overlap between Lewis structuresWithin Huckel approximation, (<math> <p_{i}|p_{j}>=\delta_{ij}</math>)
Find <math>c_I</math> and <math>c_{II}</math> by solving the equations that derive from
This drawback can be shown using the energies of the occupied Huckel orbitals <math> \epsilon_1=\alpha+1.41\beta</math> and<math> \epsilon_2=\alpha</math> |
Computer Exercices | ||||||||
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Exercice 1 (Lewis structures of benzene, resonance)
The cc-pVTZ basis set will be used in the following, unless a different choice is specified. 1/ Vertical Resonance Energy - at the geometry of benzene. With the BLW program, and using the provided optimized geometry of benzene molecule, define one 1,3,5-cyclohexadiene Lewis structure, and optimize it's orbitals. 4 blocks need to be defined 3 blocks for 3 pi bond, one for all the sigma electrons.
Exercice 2 (allyl)
Exercice 3 (Butadiene deconjugation without hyperconjugation)Examine the conjugation in planar butadiene and the hyperconjugation in perpendicular butadiene, and explain the rotational barrier. Note that often people rotate one participating group to disable the conjugation and use the barrier to measure the conjugation energy. What is the inconvenience of this approach? BLW shall be used
Exercice 4 (BH3... NH3) electronics at the B3LYP 6-31G(d) levelBLW energy decomposition analysis can be used to shed light into the nature of intermolecular interactions. Example of NH3∙∙∙BH3. Visualize the polarization and electron transfer effects using the electron density difference (EDD) maps.
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