FOURTH-ORDER VIBRATIONAL TRANSITION STATE THEORY AND CHEMICAL KINETICS

Author(s):  
John Stanton ◽  
Justin Gong ◽  
Devin Matthews
1998 ◽  
Vol 53 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 178 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. R. Logan

Abstract Fundamental scientific reasons are advanced for preferring the formulation of the THE Rule offered in a Note of 1996 to that employed by Rooney in a Note of 1997. These illustrate that, whereas Transition State theory has been of considerable service to the development of chemical kinetics, it has not been of any utility in regard to issues of thermodynamics


Author(s):  
Niels Engholm Henriksen ◽  
Flemming Yssing Hansen

This chapter reviews the microscopic interpretation of the pre-exponential factor and the activation energy in rate constant expressions of the Arrhenius form. The pre-exponential factor of apparent unimolecular reactions is, roughly, expected to be of the order of a vibrational frequency, whereas the pre-exponential factor of bimolecular reactions, roughly, is related to the number of collisions per unit time and per unit volume. The activation energy of an elementary reaction can be interpreted as the average energy of the molecules that react minus the average energy of the reactants. Specializing to conventional transition-state theory, the activation energy is related to the classical barrier height of the potential energy surface plus the difference in zero-point energies and average internal energies between the activated complex and the reactants. When quantum tunnelling is included in transition-state theory, the activation energy is reduced, compared to the interpretation given in conventional transition-state theory.


Author(s):  
Niels Engholm Henriksen ◽  
Flemming Yssing Hansen

This chapter discusses an approximate approach—transition-state theory—to the calculation of rate constants for bimolecular reactions. A reaction coordinate is identified from a normal-mode coordinate analysis of the activated complex, that is, the supermolecule on the saddle-point of the potential energy surface. Motion along this coordinate is treated by classical mechanics and recrossings of the saddle point from the product to the reactant side are neglected, leading to the result of conventional transition-state theory expressed in terms of relevant partition functions. Various alternative derivations are presented. Corrections that incorporate quantum mechanical tunnelling along the reaction coordinate are described. Tunnelling through an Eckart barrier is discussed and the approximate Wigner tunnelling correction factor is derived in the limit of a small degree of tunnelling. It concludes with applications of transition-state theory to, for example, the F + H2 reaction, and comparisons with results based on quasi-classical mechanics as well as exact quantum mechanics.


2002 ◽  
Vol 106 (16) ◽  
pp. 4125-4136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald Z. Pascual ◽  
George C. Schatz ◽  
Gÿorgÿ Lendvay ◽  
Diego Troya

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