Ab Initio Aqueous Thermochemistry: Application to the Oxidation of Hydroxylamine in Nitric Acid Solution
- 22 September 2007
- journal article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in The Journal of Physical Chemistry B
- Vol. 111 (41) , 11968-11983
- https://doi.org/10.1021/jp073539t
Abstract
Ab initio molecular orbital calculations were performed and thermochemical parameters estimated for 46 species involved in the oxidation of hydroxylamine in aqueous nitric acid solution. Solution-phase properties were estimated using the several levels of theory in Gaussian03 and using COSMOtherm. The use of computational chemistry calculations for the estimation of physical properties and constants in solution is addressed. The connection between the pseudochemical potential of Ben-Naim and the traditional standard state-based thermochemistry is shown, and the connection of these ideas to computational chemistry results is established. This theoretical framework provides a basis for the practical use of the solution-phase computational chemistry estimates for real systems, without the implicit assumptions that often hide the nuances of solution-phase thermochemistry. The effect of nonidealities and a method to account for them is also discussed. A method is presented for estimating the solvation enthalpy and entropy for dilute aqueous solutions based on the solvation free energy from the ab initio calculations. The accuracy of the estimated thermochemical parameters was determined through comparison with (i) enthalpies of formation in the gas phase and in solution, (ii) Henry's law data for aqueous solutions, and (iii) various reaction equilibria in aqueous solution. Typical mean absolute deviations (MAD) for the solvation free energy in room-temperature water appear to be ∼1.5 kcal/mol for most methods investigated. The MAD for computed enthalpies of formation in solution was 1.5−3 kcal/mol, depending on the methodology employed and the type of species (ion, radical, closed-shell) being computed. This work provides a relatively simple and unambiguous approach that can be used to estimate the thermochemical parameters needed to build detailed ab initio kinetic models of systems in aqueous solution. Technical challenges that limit the accuracy of the estimates are highlighted.Keywords
This publication has 38 references indexed in Scilit:
- Solvation Model Based on Order Parameters and a Fast Sampling Method for the Calculation of the Solvation Free Energies of PeptidesThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 2006
- Interfaces and the driving force of hydrophobic assemblyNature, 2005
- Oxidation of Hydroxylamine by Nitrous and Nitric Acids. Model Development from First Principle SCRF CalculationsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 2005
- On the Cavitation Energy of WaterChemistry – A European Journal, 2003
- Solvation dynamics: The role of hydrogen bondingThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1998
- Mechanism of the acid catalysed pathway for the nitrosation of hydroxylamineJournal of the Chemical Society, Perkin Transactions 2, 1992
- Osmotic Coefficients and Mean Activity Coefficients of Uni-univalent Electrolytes in Water at 25°CJournal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data, 1972
- Kinetics and mechanism of the reaction between nitrous acid and hydroxylamine. Part II. The alkyl hydroxylaminesJournal of the Chemical Society B: Physical Organic, 1968
- New activity coefficients of 0–100 per cent aqueous nitric acidJournal of Inorganic and Nuclear Chemistry, 1964
- 525. Kinetics and mechanism of the reaction between nitrous acid and hydroxylamine. Part IJournal of the Chemical Society, 1963