The lowest-energy isomer of C2Si2H4 is a bridged ring: Reinterpretation of the spectroscopic data based on DFT and coupled-cluster calculations

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Abstract

The lowest-energy isomer of C2Si2H4 is determined by high-accuracy ab initio calculations to be the bridged four-membered ring 1,2-didehydro-1,3-disilabicyclo[1.1.0]butane (1), contrary to prior theoretical and experimental studies favoring the three-member ring silylsilacyclopropenylidene (2). These and eight other low-lying minima on the potential energy surface are characterized and ordered by energy using the CCSD(T) method with complete basis set extrapolation, and the resulting benchmark-quality set of relative isomer energies is used to evaluate the performance of several comparatively inexpensive approaches based on many-body perturbation theory and density functional theory (DFT). Double-hybrid DFT methods are found to provide an exceptional balance of accuracy and efficiency for energy-ordering isomers. Free energy profiles are developed to reason the relatively large abundance of isomer 2 observed in previous measurements. Infrared spectra and photolysis reaction mechanisms are modeled for isomers 1 and 2, providing additional insight about previously reported spectra and photoisomerization channels.

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Lutz, J. J., & Burggraf, L. W. (2019). The lowest-energy isomer of C2Si2H4 is a bridged ring: Reinterpretation of the spectroscopic data based on DFT and coupled-cluster calculations. Inorganics, 7(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/inorganics7040051

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