On the Role of Hydrogen Bond Strength and Charge Transfer of a Diels-Alder Reaction On-Water: Semiempirical and Free Energy Calculations.

01 February 2022, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Accelerated chemistry at the interface with water has received increasing attention. The mechanisms behind the enhanced reactivity On-Water are not yet clear. In this work we use a Langevin scheme in the spirit of second generation Car-Parrinello to accelerate the second-order density functional Tight-Binding (DFTB2) method in order to investigate the free energy of two Diels-Alder reaction On-Water: the cycloaddition between cyclopentadiene and ethyl cinnamate or thionocinnamate. The only difference between the reactants is the substitution of a carbonyl oxygen for a thiocarbonyl sulfur, making possible the distinction between them as strong and weak hydrogen-bond acceptors. We find a different mechanism for the reaction during the transition states and uncover the role of hydrogen bonds along with the reaction path. Our results suggest that acceleration of Diels-Alder reactions do not arise from an increased number of hydrogen bonds at the transition state and charge transfer plays a significant role. However, the presence of water and hydrogen-bonds is determinant for the catalysis of these reactions.

Keywords

DFTB 2
Umbrella Sampling SimulationsFree energy prediction
on-water catalysis
Hydrogen bonding
linear scaling
accelerated molecular dynamics (aMD)

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Supplementary Info On the role of hydrogen bond strength and charge transfer of a Diels-Alder reaction On-Water Semiempirical and free energy calculations
Description
Hydrogen bond distributions
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