How accurate is DFT for iridium-mediated chemistry?
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/10489Date
2016-09-27Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Hopmann, Kathrin HelenAbstract
Iridium chemistry is versatile and widespread, with
superior performance for reaction types such as enantioselective
hydrogenation and C−H activation. In order to gain insight into the
mechanistic details of such systems, density functional theory (DFT)
studies are often employed. But how accurate is DFT for modeling
iridium-mediated transformations in solution? We have evaluated how
well DFT reproduces the energies and reactivities of 11 iridium-mediated
transformations, which were carefully chosen to correspond to
elementary steps typically encountered in iridium-catalyzed chemistry
(bond formation, isomerization, ligand substitution, and ligand association). Five DFT functionals, B3LYP, PBE, PBE0, M06L,
and M11L, were evaluated as-is or in combination with an empirical dispersion correction (D2, D3, or D3BJ), leading to 13
combinations. Different solvent models (IEFPCM and SMD) were evaluated, alongside various correction terms such as big basis
set effects, counterpoise corrections, frequency scaling, and different entropy modifications. PBE-D type functionals are clearly
superior, with PBE-D2,IEFPCM providing average absolute errors for uncorrected Gibbs free energies of 0.9 kcal/mol for the
nine reactions with a constant number of moles (1.2 kcal/mol for all 11 reactions). This provides a straightforward and accurate
computational protocol for computing free energies of iridium-mediated transformations in solution. However, because the good
results may originate from favorable error cancellations of larger and oppositely signed enthalpy and entropy errors, this protocol
is recommended for free energies only.
Description
Published version. Source at http://doi.org/10.1021/acs.organomet.6b00377. License - ACS AuthorChoice.