pi: orbitals of the carbon atoms, generates bonding normal to the sheets,

Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hassan Harb ◽  
Lee Thompson ◽  
Hrant Hratchian

Lanthanide hydroxides are key species in a variety of catalytic processes and in the preparation of corresponding oxides. This work explores the fundamental structure and bonding of the simplest lanthanide hydroxide, LnOH (Ln=La-Lu), using density functional theory calculations. Interestingly, the calculations predict that all structures of this series will be linear. Furthermore, these results indicate a valence electron configuration featuring an occupied sigma orbital and two occupied pi orbitals for all LnOH compounds, suggesting that the lanthanide-hydroxide bond is best characterized as a covalent triple bond.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hassan Harb ◽  
Lee Thompson ◽  
Hrant Hratchian

Lanthanide hydroxides are key species in a variety of catalytic processes and in the preparation of corresponding oxides. This work explores the fundamental structure and bonding of the simplest lanthanide hydroxide, LnOH (Ln=La-Lu), using density functional theory calculations. Interestingly, the calculations predict that all structures of this series will be linear. Furthermore, these results indicate a valence electron configuration featuring an occupied sigma orbital and two occupied pi orbitals for all LnOH compounds, suggesting that the lanthanide-hydroxide bond is best characterized as a covalent triple bond.


1974 ◽  
Vol 29 (12) ◽  
pp. 1827-1833 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chr. Mengersen ◽  
J. Subramanian ◽  
J.-H. Fuhrhop ◽  
K. M. Smith

The isotropic 205Tl hyperfine couplings obtained from the ESR spectra of the radical cations of Tl (III) meso tetraphenyl porphyrin (TPP), octaethyl porphyrin (OEP) and octaethyl chlorin (OEC) are reported. The radical cations were generated by electrooxidation in dichloromethane as solvent. A Karplus-Fraenkel type bilinear relation is used to interpret the 205Tl couplings, taking into account the sigma-pi spin polarization of Tl -N bonds by the spin density at the nitrogen atoms in the ligand as well as the direct pi interaction of the orbitals of Tl with the pi orbitals of the ligand. It is shown that for the cation radicals of Tl porphyrins, both these mechanisms contribute to the Tl couplings whereas for the cation radicals of Co- and Zn-porphyrins the sigma-pi polarization alone is sufficient to account for the metal hyperfine couplings. It is suggested that Tl-hyperfine couplings can be used to estimate the nitrogen spin densities of porphyrin radical systems when the nitrogen splittings are not resolved in the ESR spectra.


1974 ◽  
Vol 5 (49) ◽  
Author(s):  
PETER BISCHOF ◽  
ROLF GLEITER ◽  
ARMIN DE MEIJERE ◽  
LUEDER-ULRICH MEYER
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hassan Harb ◽  
Lee Thompson ◽  
Hrant Hratchian

Lanthanide hydroxides are key species in a variety of catalytic processes and in the preparation of corresponding oxides. This work explores the fundamental structure and bonding of the simplest lanthanide hydroxide, LnOH (Ln=La-Lu), using density functional theory calculations. Interestingly, the calculations predict that all structures of this series will be linear. Furthermore, these results indicate a valence electron configuration featuring an occupied sigma orbital and two occupied pi orbitals for all LnOH compounds, suggesting that the lanthanide-hydroxide bond is best characterized as a covalent triple bond.


1986 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 224-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph A. Gardella ◽  
Susan A. Ferguson ◽  
Roland L. Chin

The applications of ESCA to polymer surface analysis include the use of the secondary final-state effects which lead to satellite structure near the core-level photoemission (PE) lines. Specifically, unsaturated and aromatic functionalities in organic compounds and polymers lead to π* ← π shakeup peaks of less than 10 eV lower kinetic energy (higher binding energy). In the surface analysis of polymers, these features can be utilized for qualitative analysis, identification of the presence and structure of aromatic bonding, and quantitative analysis in determining the amount of a particular block or the aromatic containing function in the near-surface region. Carbon Is shakeups are most often used, but the present study includes detailed qualitative and quantitative analysis of shakeup structures from PE lines from each type of atom in hydrocarbon-, siloxane-, and sulfur-containing polymers. These results show the importance of including the shakeup intensity in quantitative peak area calculations and in peak fitting of complex PE envelopes. These studies prove in a variety of systems that the effects of third-row atoms on the final state lead to the presence of shakeup features in atoms with orbitals which do not participate in the aromatic orbital initial state, thus complicating interpretation of structure from the presence of these features. Results from the siloxane and sulfone polymers indicate that previously held assumptions about the nature of the initial-state molecular orbital may overlook the contribution of empty 3d orbitals or increased charge density on the Si or S atom which would spread the pi orbitals to the oxygen in the aromatic siloxane or sulfone systems. Finally, analysis of these features can provide quantitative analysis of polymeric surface structure by monitoring the relative intensity of the feature to the main PE line.


1981 ◽  
Vol 103 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur Greenberg ◽  
Joel F. Liebman
Keyword(s):  

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