- Correlating DFT-calculated energy barriers to experiments in nonheme octahedral Fe(IV)O species.
Correlating DFT-calculated energy barriers to experiments in nonheme octahedral Fe(IV)O species.
The experimentally measured bimolecular reaction rate constant, k(2), should in principle correlate with the theoretically calculated rate-limiting free energy barrier, ĪG(ā ), through the Eyring equation, but it fails quite often to do so due to the inability of current computational methods to account in a precise manner for all the factors contributing to ĪG(ā ). This is further aggravated by the exponential sensitivity of the Eyring equation to these factors. We have taken herein a pragmatic approach for C-H activation reactions of 1,4-cyclohexadiene with a variety of octahedral nonheme Fe(IV)O complexes. The approach consists of empirically determining two constants that would aid in predicting experimental k(2) values uniformly from theoretically calculated electronic energy (ĪE(ā )) values. Shown in this study is the predictive power as well as insights into energy relationships in Fe(IV)O C-H activation reactions. We also find that the difference between ĪG(ā ) and ĪE(ā ) converges at slow reactions, in a manner suggestive of changes in the importance of the triplet spin state weight in the overall reaction.