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Electron solvent induced

This is no longer the case when (iii) motion along the reaction patir occurs on a time scale comparable to other relaxation times of the solute or the solvent, i.e. the system is partially non-relaxed. In this situation dynamic effects have to be taken into account explicitly, such as solvent-assisted intramolecular vibrational energy redistribution (IVR) in the solute, solvent-induced electronic surface hopping, dephasing, solute-solvent energy transfer, dynamic caging, rotational relaxation, or solvent dielectric and momentum relaxation. [Pg.831]

As an extension of the intermolecular self-exchange described above, the solvent-induced intramolecular electron exchange kinetics in radical anions of 1,3-dinitrobenzene [47] and benzene 1,3-dicarbaldehyde [48] have been studied by several authors (Freed and Fraenkel, 1964 Grampp et al., 1989, 1990b Shohoji et al, 1987). The advantage of [47] and [48] is their structural simplicity and their high stability, which allows measurements even in protic... [Pg.33]

Convincing evidence was found that the majority of acyclic aldo-nitrones exist in the Z-form, by investigating the ASIS-effect (aromatic solvent induced shift effect) (399). However, in some cases, specified by structural factors and solvent, the presence of both isomers has been revealed. Thus, in C -acyl-nitrones the existence of Z -and -isomers was detected. Their ratio appears to be heavily dependant on the solvent polar solvents stabilize Z-isomers and nonpolar, E-isomers (399). A similar situation was observed in a- methoxy-A-tert-butylnitrones. In acetone, the more polar Z-isomer was observed, whereas in chloroform, the less polar E-isomer prevailed. The isomer assignments were made on the basis of the Nuclear Overhauser Effect (NOE) (398). /Z-Isomerization of acylnitrones can occur upon treatment with Lewis acids, such as, MgBr2 (397). Another reason for isomerization is free rotation with respect to the C-N bond in adduct (218) resulting from the reversible addition of MeOH to the C=N bond (Scheme 2.74). The increase of the electron acceptor character of the substituent contributes to the process (135). [Pg.192]

Fe3+X6...Fe2+X6, which is the reactant of the outer-sphere electron transfer reaction mentioned above when X = Y. Clearly the ground state involves a symmetric linear combination of a state with the electron on the right (as written) and one with the electron on the left. Thus we could create the localized states by using the SCRF method to calculate the symmetric and antisymmetric stationary states and taking plus and minus linear combinations. This is reasonable but does not take account of the fact that the orbitals for non-transferred electrons should be optimized for the case where the transferred electron is localized (in contrast to which, the SCRF orbitals are all optimized for the delocalized adiabatic structure). The role of solvent-induced charge localization has also been studied for ionic dissociation reactions [109],... [Pg.66]

The several theoretical and/or simulation methods developed for modelling the solvation phenomena can be applied to the treatment of solvent effects on chemical reactivity. A variety of systems - ranging from small molecules to very large ones, such as biomolecules [236-238], biological membranes [239] and polymers [240] -and problems - mechanism of organic reactions [25, 79, 223, 241-247], chemical reactions in supercritical fluids [216, 248-250], ultrafast spectroscopy [251-255], electrochemical processes [256, 257], proton transfer [74, 75, 231], electron transfer [76, 77, 104, 258-261], charge transfer reactions and complexes [262-264], molecular and ionic spectra and excited states [24, 265-268], solvent-induced polarizability [221, 269], reaction dynamics [28, 78, 270-276], isomerization [110, 277-279], tautomeric equilibrium [280-282], conformational changes [283], dissociation reactions [199, 200, 227], stability [284] - have been treated by these techniques. Some of these... [Pg.339]

Lupulescu AP, Birmingham DJ. 1976. Effect of protective agent against lipid-solvent-induced damages Ultrastructural and scanning electron microscopial study of human epidermis. Arch Environ Health 31(l) 33-36. [Pg.184]

The requirement needed to incorporate the solvent effects into a state-specific (multireference) method is fulfilled by using the effective Hamiltonian defined in Equation (1.159). The only specificity to take into account is that in order to calculate Va we have to know the density matrix of the electronic state of interest (see the contribution by Cammi for more details). Such nonlinear character of Va is generally solved through an iterative procedure [35] at each iteration the solvent-induced component of the effective Hamiltonian is computed by exploiting Equation (1.157) with the apparent charges determined from the standard ASC equation with the first order density matrix of the preceding step. At each iteration n the free energy of each state K is obtained as... [Pg.118]

These findings indicate the complexity of the solvent polarization effect on the solute charge distribution, which shows differential trends depending on the nature of the solute. In conjunction with the free energy of solvation, the analysis of the solvent-induced changes in the solute s electron density should be valuable to shed light on the influence of solvation on the chemical reactivity of solutes. [Pg.327]


See other pages where Electron solvent induced is mentioned: [Pg.1162]    [Pg.1986]    [Pg.440]    [Pg.1070]    [Pg.275]    [Pg.440]    [Pg.1070]    [Pg.227]    [Pg.241]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.767]    [Pg.352]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.184]    [Pg.565]    [Pg.187]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.60]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.594]    [Pg.582]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.467]    [Pg.359]    [Pg.692]    [Pg.200]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.501]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.254]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.680 ]




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Solvent-induced electronic polarization

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