Accurate Structure
and Spectroscopic Properties of
Azulene and Its Derivatives by Means of Pisa Composite Schemes and
Vibrational Perturbation Theory to Second Order
posted on 2024-11-26, 12:37authored byLina Uribe, Silvia Di Grande, Marco Mendolicchio, Nicola Tasinato, Vincenzo Barone
The structural and spectroscopic
properties in the gas
phase of
azulene and some of its N-bearing derivatives have been analyzed by
a general computational strategy based on the recent Pisa composite
schemes (PCSs). First of all, an accurate semiexperimental equilibrium
structure has been derived for azulene and employed to validate the
geometrical parameters delivered by different quantum chemical methods.
Next, different isomerization energies (azulene to naphthalene, 1-aza-azulene
to quinoline and to other isomers) have been computed by an explicitly
correlated PCS version employing frozen natural orbitals. Accurate
geometries have been obtained by a cheaper PCS variant based on a
double-hybrid functional improved by one-parameter bond corrections,
with the same functional providing also remarkable harmonic frequencies.
The corresponding equilibrium rotational constants show average deviations
within 0.1% from experimental results when taking into account anharmonic
vibrational corrections obtained by a global hybrid functional. Therefore,
reliable computational estimates have been produced for the rotational
constants of several nitrogen derivatives (isomeric aza-azulenes and
guaiazulene), whose non-negligible dipole moments could allow experimental
microwave characterizations. An analogous approach delivers infrared
spectra in remarkable agreement with their experimental counterparts
for naphthalene, quinoline, and azulene, together with reliable predictions
for the still-unknown spectrum of 1-aza-azulene. In addition to their
intrinsic interest, the results of this paper further confirm that
a very accurate yet robust and user-friendly tool is now available
for aiding high-resolution spectroscopic studies of quite large systems
of current technological and/or biological interest.