posted on 2012-09-20, 00:00authored byPatrick
J. Hanway, Arthur H. Winter
The electronic state orderings and energies of heteroaryl
oxenium
ions were computed using high-level CASPT2//CASSCF computations. We
find that these ions have a number of diverse, low-energy configurations.
Depending on the nature of the heteroaryl substituent, the lowest-energy
configuration may be open-shell singlet, closed-shell singlet, or
triplet, with further diversity found among the subtypes of these
configurations. The 2- and 3-pyridinyl oxenium ions show small perturbations
from the phenyl oxenium ion in electronic state orderings and energies,
having closed-shell singlet ground states with significant gaps to
an n,π* triplet state. In contrast, the 4-pyridinyl oxenium
ion is computed to have a low-energy nitrenium ion-like triplet state.
The pyrimidinyl oxenium ion is computed to have a near degeneracy
between an open-shell singlet and triplet state, and the pyrizidinyl
oxenium ion is computed to have a near-triple degeneracy between a
closed-shell singlet state, an open-shell singlet state, and a triplet
state. Therefore, the ground state of these latter heteroaryl oxenium
ions cannot be predicted with certainty; in principle, reactivity
from any of these states may be possible. These systems are of fundamental
interest for probing the spin- and configuration-dependent reactivity
of unusual electronic states for this important class of reactive
intermediate.