February 1, 2007
Journal Article

Molecular Mechanism for H2 Release from BH3NH3, Including the Catalytic Role of the Lewis Acid BH3

Abstract

Electronic structure calculations using various methods, up to the coupled-cluster CCSD(T) level, in conjunction with the aug-cc-pVnZ basis sets with n ) D, T, and Q, extrapolated to the complete basis set limit, show that the borane molecule (BH3) can act as an efficient bifunctional acid-base catalyst in the H2 elimination reactions of XHnYHn systems (X, Y ) C, B, N). Such a catalyst is needed as the generation of H2 from isoelectronic ethane and borane amine compounds proceeds with an energy barrier much higher than that of the X-Y bond energy. The asymptotic energy barrier for H2 release is reduced from 36.4 kcal/mol in BH3NH3 to 6.0 kcal/mol with the presence of BH3 relative to the molecular asymptote. The NH3 molecule can also participate in a similar catalytic process but induces a smaller reduction of the energy barrier. The kinetics of these processes was analyzed by both transition-state and RRKM theory. The catalytic effect of BH3 has also been probed by an analysis of the electronic densities of the transition structures using the atom-in-molecule (AIM) and electron localization function (ELF) approaches.

Revised: April 7, 2011 | Published: February 1, 2007

Citation

Nguyen M.T., V. Nguyen, M.H. Matus, G. Gopakumar, and D.A. Dixon. 2007. Molecular Mechanism for H2 Release from BH3NH3, Including the Catalytic Role of the Lewis Acid BH3. Journal of Physical Chemistry A 111, no. 4:679-690. doi:10.1021/jp066175y