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Magnesium electron correlation

In substitutional metallic solid solutions and in liquid alloys the experimental data have been described by Epstein and Paskin (1967) in terms of a predominant frictional force which leads to the accumulation of one species towards the anode. The relative movement of metallic ion cores in an alloy phase is related to the scattering cross-section for the conduction electrons, which in turn can be correlated with the relative resistance of the pure metals. Thus iron, which has a higher specific resistance than copper, will accumulate towards the anode in a Cu-Fe alloy. Similarly in a germanium-lithium alloy, the solute lithium atoms accumulate towards the cathode. In liquid alloys the same qualitative effect is observed, thus magnesium accumulates near the cathode in solution in bismuth, while uranium, which is in a higher Group of the Periodic Table than bismuth, accumulated near the anode in the same solvent. [Pg.154]

Until now, the isotopic effect was discnssed only in relation to the reactants. In electron-transfer reactions, the solvent plays an eqnally important role. As mentioned, different solvate forms are possible for reactants, transition states, and products. Therefore, it seems important to find a reaction where the kinetic effect resulting from the introduction of an isotope would be present for solvents, but absent for reactants. For a published work concerning this problem, refer Yusupov and Hairutdinov (1987). In this work, the authors studied photoinduced electron transfer from magnesium ethioporphyrin to chloroform followed by a dark recombination of ion-radicals in frozen alcohol solutions. It was determined that the deuteration of chloroform does not affect the rate of transfer, whereas deuteration of the solvent reduces it. The authors correlate these results with the participation of solvent vibrational modes in the manner of energy diffraction during electron transfer. [Pg.120]

For the description of the linear and nonlinear optical properties of metallotetrapyrroles, TDDFT methods have proven [133-148] to be an excellent alternative to conventional highly correlated ab initio methods, such as SAC-CI, STEOM-CC, and CASPT2, for which these systems still represent a severe computational challenge, especially when transition metals, lanthanides or actinides are involved. The few highly correlated ab initio calculations dealing with the excited state properties of metallotetrapyrroles that have appeared to date only concern magnesium and zinc porphyrins and porphyrazines [149-151]. Application of TDDFT methods to the electronic spectroscopy of a variety of metallotetrapyrroles, including homoleptic and heteroleptic sandwiches, will be illustrated in this section. [Pg.88]

A refinement of the mechanism was searched for in the more recent literature when a differentiation was made between what was called inner-sphere ET and outer-sphere ET. It was assumed that, in the reaction of a Grignard reagent with a ketone (i.e., benzophenone), the electron transfer was rate-limiting [44] furthermore, for a series of Grignard reagents, a correlation had been found between the reaction rates and their oxidation potentials [21], according to the Marcus theory for outer-sphere ET [55]. Nevertheless, it seemed questionable [56] whether the electron transfer was an independent step (steps l->2->3-+4 in Scheme 19), or whether it was concerted with the transfer of the magnesium atom (steps l->3->4). [Pg.234]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.56 , Pg.57 ]




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