Abstract
In the present work, we have extended molecular Density Functional Theory (MDFT) to study model solvents at high pressure and how chemical reactivity can be modified. Notably, we have considered an example of Diels-Alder reaction in model apolar (CCl4) and polar (CH2Cl2) solvents.MDFT allows to calculate solvation free energies for different chemical structures along the reaction pathway at different pressures. These energies, combined with (electronic) density functional theory calculations providing energetic differences between reactants, transitions states, intermediates and products, allow us to obtain the reaction free energy profiles in a large pressure range (from ambient to 1.5 GPa). Special attention was paid to the role of the solvent dielectric response and its influence on reaction kinetics. The model makes it possible to reproduce the experimental dielectric constant at intermediate pressures (0-0.2 GPa) and to infer its increase at high pressures in the GPa range.The numerical findings are in line with the experimental observations, proving that the reaction is promoted by high pressures and that a trans/cis diastereoselectivity is induced in the product distribution. It is shown that the electrostatic interactions play a major role in these findings.Finally, we can obtain the activation volume, which is a reference quantity in pressure dependentreactivity, as a direct results of our calculations, with values in agreement with what experimentally typically observed.
Supplementary materials
Title
Geometries
Description
Geometries and charges of relevant structures
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