Cargando…

Extending conceptual DFT to include external variables: the influence of magnetic fields

An extension of conceptual DFT to include the influence of an external magnetic field is proposed in the context of a program set up to cope with the ever increasing variability of reaction conditions and concomitant reactivity. The two simplest global reactivity descriptors, the electronic chemical...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Francotte, Robin, Irons, Tom J. P., Teale, Andrew M., de Proft, Frank, Geerlings, Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9093152/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35655570
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1sc07263c
_version_ 1784705272978079744
author Francotte, Robin
Irons, Tom J. P.
Teale, Andrew M.
de Proft, Frank
Geerlings, Paul
author_facet Francotte, Robin
Irons, Tom J. P.
Teale, Andrew M.
de Proft, Frank
Geerlings, Paul
author_sort Francotte, Robin
collection PubMed
description An extension of conceptual DFT to include the influence of an external magnetic field is proposed in the context of a program set up to cope with the ever increasing variability of reaction conditions and concomitant reactivity. The two simplest global reactivity descriptors, the electronic chemical potential (μ) and the hardness (η), are considered for the main group atoms H–Kr using current density-functional theory. The magnetic field strength, |B|, is varied between 0.0 and 1.0 B(0) = ħe(−1)a(0)(−2) ≈ 2.3505 × 10(5) T, encompassing the Coulomb and intermediate regimes. The carbon atom is studied as an exemplar system to gain insight into the behaviour of the neutral, cationic and anionic species under these conditions. Their electronic configurations change with increasing |B|, leading to a piecewise behaviour of the ionization energy (I) and electron affinity (A) values as a function of |B|. This results in complex behaviour of properties such as the electronegativity χ = −1/2(I + A) = −μ and hardness η = 1/2(I − A). This raises an interesting question: to what extent are atomic properties periodic in the presence of a magnetic field? In the Coulomb regime, close to |B| = 0, we find the familiar periodicity of the atomic properties, and make the connections to response functions central to conceptual DFT. However, as the field increases in the intermediate regime configurational changes of the atomic species lead to discontinuous changes in their properties; fundamentally changing their behaviour, which is illustrated by constructing a periodic table of χ and η values at |B| = 0.5 B(0). These values tend to increase for groups 1–2 and decrease for groups 16–18, leading to a narrower range overall and suggesting substantial changes in the chemistry of the main group elements. Changes within each group are also examined as a function of |B|. These are more complex to interpret due to the larger number of configurations accessible to heavier elements at high field. This is illustrated for group 17 where Cl and Br have qualitatively different configurations to their lighter cogener at |B| = 0.5 B(0). The insight into periodic trends in strong magnetic fields may provide a crucial starting point for predicting chemical reactivity under these exotic conditions.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9093152
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher The Royal Society of Chemistry
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-90931522022-06-01 Extending conceptual DFT to include external variables: the influence of magnetic fields Francotte, Robin Irons, Tom J. P. Teale, Andrew M. de Proft, Frank Geerlings, Paul Chem Sci Chemistry An extension of conceptual DFT to include the influence of an external magnetic field is proposed in the context of a program set up to cope with the ever increasing variability of reaction conditions and concomitant reactivity. The two simplest global reactivity descriptors, the electronic chemical potential (μ) and the hardness (η), are considered for the main group atoms H–Kr using current density-functional theory. The magnetic field strength, |B|, is varied between 0.0 and 1.0 B(0) = ħe(−1)a(0)(−2) ≈ 2.3505 × 10(5) T, encompassing the Coulomb and intermediate regimes. The carbon atom is studied as an exemplar system to gain insight into the behaviour of the neutral, cationic and anionic species under these conditions. Their electronic configurations change with increasing |B|, leading to a piecewise behaviour of the ionization energy (I) and electron affinity (A) values as a function of |B|. This results in complex behaviour of properties such as the electronegativity χ = −1/2(I + A) = −μ and hardness η = 1/2(I − A). This raises an interesting question: to what extent are atomic properties periodic in the presence of a magnetic field? In the Coulomb regime, close to |B| = 0, we find the familiar periodicity of the atomic properties, and make the connections to response functions central to conceptual DFT. However, as the field increases in the intermediate regime configurational changes of the atomic species lead to discontinuous changes in their properties; fundamentally changing their behaviour, which is illustrated by constructing a periodic table of χ and η values at |B| = 0.5 B(0). These values tend to increase for groups 1–2 and decrease for groups 16–18, leading to a narrower range overall and suggesting substantial changes in the chemistry of the main group elements. Changes within each group are also examined as a function of |B|. These are more complex to interpret due to the larger number of configurations accessible to heavier elements at high field. This is illustrated for group 17 where Cl and Br have qualitatively different configurations to their lighter cogener at |B| = 0.5 B(0). The insight into periodic trends in strong magnetic fields may provide a crucial starting point for predicting chemical reactivity under these exotic conditions. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022-04-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9093152/ /pubmed/35655570 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1sc07263c Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Francotte, Robin
Irons, Tom J. P.
Teale, Andrew M.
de Proft, Frank
Geerlings, Paul
Extending conceptual DFT to include external variables: the influence of magnetic fields
title Extending conceptual DFT to include external variables: the influence of magnetic fields
title_full Extending conceptual DFT to include external variables: the influence of magnetic fields
title_fullStr Extending conceptual DFT to include external variables: the influence of magnetic fields
title_full_unstemmed Extending conceptual DFT to include external variables: the influence of magnetic fields
title_short Extending conceptual DFT to include external variables: the influence of magnetic fields
title_sort extending conceptual dft to include external variables: the influence of magnetic fields
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9093152/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35655570
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1sc07263c
work_keys_str_mv AT francotterobin extendingconceptualdfttoincludeexternalvariablestheinfluenceofmagneticfields
AT ironstomjp extendingconceptualdfttoincludeexternalvariablestheinfluenceofmagneticfields
AT tealeandrewm extendingconceptualdfttoincludeexternalvariablestheinfluenceofmagneticfields
AT deproftfrank extendingconceptualdfttoincludeexternalvariablestheinfluenceofmagneticfields
AT geerlingspaul extendingconceptualdfttoincludeexternalvariablestheinfluenceofmagneticfields