posted on 2019-08-09, 18:33authored byStéphanie Valleau, Todd J. Martínez
We
studied the reaction dynamics of a proposed prebiotic reaction
theoretically. The chemical process involves acetone cyanohydrin or
formalcyanohydrin reacting with hydrosulfide in an aqueous environment.
Rate constants and populations of reactant and product bimolecular
geometric orientations for the reactions were obtained by using density
functional theory for the energies, transition-state theory for the
rates, and matrix exponentiation as well as the hybrid tau-leaping
algorithm for the population dynamics. The role of including the solvent
explicitly versus implicitly was also investigated. We found that
adding explicit water or hydrogen sulfide molecules lowers the activation
energy barrier and leads to a more efficient reaction pathway. In
particular, hydrogen sulfide was a better proton donor. Finally, we
studied the role of including more than one reactant and product bimolecular
orientation geometry in the dynamics. Including all initial pathways,
reactant to reactant, product to product, reactant to product, and
product to reactant led to a larger reaction rate constant compared
to the single minimum energy pathway approach. Overall, we found that
most reactions which involve formalcyanohydrin occur more rapidly
or at the same speed as reactions which involve acetone cyanohydrin
at room temperature.