The research described in this product was performed in part in the Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory, a national scientific user facility sponsored by the Department of Energy's Office of Biological and Environmental Research and located at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. Various ab initio methods, including self-consistent field (SCF), configuration interaction, coupled
cluster (CC), and complete-active-space SCF (CASSCF), have been employed to study the
electronic structure of copper hydroxide (CuOH). Geometries, total energies, dipole moments,
harmonic vibrational frequencies, and zero-point vibrational energies are reported for the linear 1?+
and 1? stationary points, and for the bent ground-state X˜ 1A', and excited-states 2 1A" and 1 1A". Six
different basis sets have been used in the study, Wachters/DZP being the smallest and QZVPP being
the largest. The ground- and excited-state bending modes present imaginary frequencies for the
linear stationary points, indicating that bent structures are more favorable. The effects of relativity
for CuOH are important and have been considered using the Douglas–Kroll approach with
cc-pVTZ/cc-pVTZ_DK and cc-pVQZ/cc-pVQZ_DK basis sets. The bent ground and two
lowest-lying singlet excited states of the CuOH molecule are indeed energetically more stable than
the corresponding linear structures. The optimized geometrical parameters for the X˜ 1A' and 1 1A"
states agree fairly well with available experimental values. However, the 2 1A' structure and
rotational constants are in poor agreement with experiment, and we suggest that the latter are in
error. The predicted adiabatic excitation energies are also inconsistent with the experimental values
of 45.5 kcal mol-1 for the 2 1A' state and 52.6 kcal mol-1 for the 1 1A" state. The theoretical CC and
CASSCF methods show lower adiabatic excitation energies for the 1 1A" state (53.1 kcal mol-1)
than those for the corresponding 2 1A' state (57.6 kcal mol-1), suggesting that the 1 1A" state might
be the first singlet excited state while the 2 1A' state might be the second singlet excited state.
Revised: January 4, 2008 |
Published: July 12, 2005
Citation
Wang S., A. Paul, N.J. DeYonker, Y. Yamaguchi, and H.F. Schaefer. 2005. "The Ground and Two Lowest-lying Singlet Excited Electronic States
of Copper Hydroxide (CuOH)." Journal of Chemical Physics 123, no. 1:014313 1-13. doi:10.1063/1.1944726