Heats of formation of triplet ethylene, ethylidene, and acetylene.

Journal: The Journal Of Physical Chemistry. A
Published:
Abstract

Heats of formation of the lowest triplet state of ethylene and the ground triplet state of ethylidene have been predicted by high level electronic structure calculations. Total atomization energies obtained from coupled-cluster CCSD(T) energies extrapolated to the complete basis set limit using correlation consistent basis sets (CBS), plus additional corrections predict the following heats of formation in kcal/mol: DeltaH0r(C2H4,3A1) = 80.1 at 0 K and 78.5 at 298 K, and DeltaH0t(CH3CH,3A' ') = 86.8 at 0 K and 85.1 at 298 K, with an error of less than +/-1.0 kcal/mol. The vertical and adiabatic singlet-triplet separation energies of ethylene were calculated as DeltaES-T,vert = 104.1 and DeltaES-T,adia = 65.8 kcal/mol. These results are in excellent agreement with recent quantum Monte Carlo (DMC) values of 103.5 +/- 0.3 and 66.4 +/- 0.3 kcal/mol. Both sets of computational values differ from the experimental estimate of 58 +/- 3 kcal/mol for the adiabatic splitting. The computed singlet-triplet gap at 0 K for acetylene is DeltaES-T,adia(C2H2) = 90.5 kcal/mol, which is in notable disagreement with the experimental value of 82.6 kcal/mol. The heat of formation of the triplet is DeltaH0tC2H2,3B2) = 145.3 kcal/mol. There is a systematic underestimation of the singlet-triplet gaps in recent photodecomposition experiments by approximately 7 to 8 kcal/mol. For vinylidene, we predict DeltaH0t(H2CC,1A1) = 98.8 kcal/mol at 298 K (exptl. 100.3 +/- 4.0), DeltaH0t(H2CC,3B2) = 146.2 at 298 K, and an energy gap DeltaES-T-adia(H2CC) = 47.7 kcal/mol.

Authors
Minh Nguyen, Myrna Matus, William Lester, David Dixon