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arXiv:2402.14941v2 Announce Type: replace
Abstract: Electronic structure theory provides a foundation for understanding chemical transformations and processes in complex chemical environments. Our work is focused on the NWChemEx project that has selected two interrelated science challenges that address the production of advanced biomass-derived fuels and other value-added chemical compounds. One of which is the dehydration of 2-propanol over a zeolite catalyst. Aqueous phase dehydration of 2-propanol was investigated using density functional theory (DFT) calculations. We considered and analyzed the thermochemistry of the dehydration of 2-propanol using NWChem calculations while the NWChemEx code is still under development. Realistically modeling the reaction in this study properly requires simulations using extended atomistic models. We validated our computational models by comparing the predicted outcomes for 2-propanol dehydration with the calculated results from 1-propanol dehydration studies. We used the first-principles DFT calculations to investigate aqueous phase dehydration of 2-propanol, examine the enthalpy of the 2-propanol reaction and computed the energy for geometry optimization for increasingly better basis sets: cc-pVDZ, cc-pVTZ, cc-pVQZ, cc-pV5Z, and cc-pV6Z. The various transition states and minima along the reaction pathway are critical to inform the NWChemEx science challenge calculations. In this work, we established how the accuracy of the calculations depends on the basis sets, and we determined what basis sets are needed to achieve sufficient accurate results. We also calculated the reaction free energy as a function of temperature as thermodynamic parameter. We found that at low temperature the reaction is thermodynamically unfavorable. Nevertheless, dehydrating 2-propanol increases entropy, underscoring the need for high temperatures to facilitate the reaction.
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