A first-principles alternative to empirical solvent parameters
The use of solvents is ubiquitous in chemistry. Empirical parameters, such as the Kamlet-Taft parameters and Gutmann donor/acceptor numbers, have long been used to predict and quantify the effects solvents have on chemical phenomena. Collectively however, such parameters are unsatisfactory, since ea...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP 2024-08, Vol.26 (31), p.275-2759 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The use of solvents is ubiquitous in chemistry. Empirical parameters, such as the Kamlet-Taft parameters and Gutmann donor/acceptor numbers, have long been used to predict and quantify the effects solvents have on chemical phenomena. Collectively however, such parameters are unsatisfactory, since each describes ultimately the same non-covalent solute-solvent and solute-solute interactions in completely disparate ways. Here we hypothesise that empirical solvent parameters are essentially proxy measures of the electrostatic terms that dominate solvent-solute interactions. On the basis of this hypothesis, we develop a new fundamental descriptor of these interactions,
, and show that it is a self-consistent, probe-free, first principles alternative to established empirical solvent parameters.
This manuscript presents a new first principles solvent parameter that unifies the myriad empirical solvent parameters used throughout chemistry. |
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ISSN: | 1463-9076 1463-9084 1463-9084 |
DOI: | 10.1039/d4cp01975j |