» Articles » PMID: 25677452

Performance of Møller-Plesset Second-order Perturbation Theory and Density Functional Theory in Predicting the Interaction Between Stannylenes and Aromatic Molecules

Overview
Journal J Mol Model
Publisher Springer
Specialty Molecular Biology
Date 2015 Feb 14
PMID 25677452
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The performances of Møller-Plesset second-order perturbation theory (MP2) and density functional theory (DFT) have been assessed for the purposes of investigating the interaction between stannylenes and aromatic molecules. The complexes between SnX2 (where X = H, F, Cl, Br, and I) and benzene or pyridine are considered. Structural and energetic properties of such complexes are calculated using six MP2-type and 14 DFT methods. The assessment of the above-mentioned methods is based on the comparison of the structures and interaction energies predicted by these methods with reference computational data. A very detailed analysis of the performances of the MP2-type and DFT methods is carried out for two complexes, namely SnH2-benzene and SnH2-pyridine. Of the MP2-type methods, the reference structure of SnH2-benzene is reproduced best by SOS-MP2, whereas SCS-MP2 is capable of mimicking the reference structure of SnH2-pyridine with the greatest accuracy. The latter method performs best in predicting the interaction energy between SnH2 and benzene or pyridine. Among the DFT methods, ωB97X provides the structures and interaction energies of the SnH2-benzene and SnH2-pyridine complexes with good accuracy. However, this density functional is not as effective in reproducing the reference data for the two complexes as the best performing MP2-type methods. Next, the DFT methods are evaluated using the full test set of SnX2-benzene and SnX2-pyridine complexes. It is found that the range-separated hybrid or dispersion-corrected density functionals should be used for describing the interaction in such complexes with reasonable accuracy.

Citing Articles

Spectra-Structure Correlations in Isotopomers of Ethanol (CXCXOX; X = H, D): Combined Near-Infrared and Anharmonic Computational Study.

Bec K, Grabska J, Huck C, Czarnecki M Molecules. 2019; 24(11).

PMID: 31212669 PMC: 6600318. DOI: 10.3390/molecules24112189.


Aromatic Rings Commonly Used in Medicinal Chemistry: Force Fields Comparison and Interactions With Water Toward the Design of New Chemical Entities.

D Poleto M, Rusu V, Grisci B, Dorn M, Lins R, Verli H Front Pharmacol. 2018; 9:395.

PMID: 29740321 PMC: 5928326. DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2018.00395.


Theoretical insight into the interaction between SnX2 (X = H, F, Cl, Br, I) and benzene.

Matczak P J Mol Model. 2016; 22(9):208.

PMID: 27525639 PMC: 4985535. DOI: 10.1007/s00894-016-3053-6.


Theoretical studies of organotin(IV) complexes derived from ONO-donor type schiff base ligands.

Sirikci G, Ancin N, Oztas S J Mol Model. 2015; 21(9):221.

PMID: 26245450 DOI: 10.1007/s00894-015-2764-4.

References
1.
Dove A, Gibson V, Marshall E, Rzepa H, White A, Williams D . Synthetic, structural, mechanistic, and computational studies on single-site beta-diketiminate tin(II) initiators for the polymerization of rac-lactide. J Am Chem Soc. 2006; 128(30):9834-43. DOI: 10.1021/ja061400a. View

2.
Goldey M, Dutoi A, Head-Gordon M . Attenuated second-order Møller-Plesset perturbation theory: performance within the aug-cc-pVTZ basis. Phys Chem Chem Phys. 2013; 15(38):15869-75. DOI: 10.1039/c3cp51826d. View

3.
Bernardo C, Bauman N, Piecuch P, Silva P . Evaluation of density functional methods on the geometric and energetic descriptions of species involved in Cu⁺-promoted catalysis. J Mol Model. 2013; 19(12):5457-67. DOI: 10.1007/s00894-013-2045-z. View

4.
Buhl M, Kabrede H . Geometries of Transition-Metal Complexes from Density-Functional Theory. J Chem Theory Comput. 2015; 2(5):1282-90. DOI: 10.1021/ct6001187. View

5.
Mori-Sanchez P, Cohen A, Yang W . Many-electron self-interaction error in approximate density functionals. J Chem Phys. 2006; 125(20):201102. DOI: 10.1063/1.2403848. View