Heat of formation group additivity
Heat of formation group additivity methods in thermochemistry enable the calculation and prediction of heat of formation of organic compounds based on additivity. This method was pioneered by S. W. Benson.
Benson model
Starting with simple linear and branched alkanes and alkenes the method works by collecting a large number of experimental heat of formation data and then divide each molecule up into distinct groups each consisting of a central atom with multiple ligands:To each group is then assigned an empirical incremental value which is independent on its position inside the molecule and independent of the nature of its neighbors:
- P primary C-3 -10.00
- S secondary C-22 -5.00
- T tertiary C-3 -2.40
- Q quaternary C-4 -0.10
- gauche correction +0.80
- 1,5 pentane interference correction +1.60
The experimental heat of formation of ethane is -20.03 kcal/mol and ethane consists of 2 P groups. Likewise propane can be written as 2P+S, isobutane as 3P+T and neopentane as 4P+Q. These four equations and 4 unknowns work out to estimations for P, S, T and Q. Of course the accuracy will increase when the dataset increases.
the data allow the calculation of heat of formation for isomers. For example, the pentanes:
- n-pentane = 2P + 3S = -35
- isopentane = 3P + S + T + 1 gauche correction = -36.6
- neopentane = 4P + Q = 40.1
- Cd- +6.27
- Cd- +8.55
- Cd-2 +10.19
- Cd- +6.78
- Cd- +8.76
- C-3 -10.00
- C-2 -4.80
- C-2 -1.67
- C-3 +1.77
- C-22 -4.30
- cis correction +1.10
- alkene gauche correction +0.80
More group additivity tables exist for a wide range of functional groups.
Gronert model
An alternative model has been developed by S. Gronert based not on breaking molecules into fragments but based on 1,2 and 1,3 interactionsThe Gronert equation reads:
The pentanes are now calculated as:
- n-pentane = 4CC + 12CH + 9HCH + 18HCC + 3CCC + = - 35.1 kcal/mol
- isopentane = 4CC + 12CH + 10HCH + 16HCC + 4CCC + = - 36.7 kcal/mol
- neopentane = 4CC + 12CH + 12HCH + 12HCC + 6CCC + = -40.1 kcal/mol
In the Gronert model these repulsive 1,3 interactions account for trends in bond dissociation energies which for example decrease going from methane to ethane to isopropane to neopentane. In this model the homolysis of a C-H bond releases strain energy in the alkane. In traditional bonding models the driving force is the ability of alkyl groups to donate electrons to the newly formed free radical carbon.