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  2. Extended Hückel method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_Hückel_method

    It is common in many theoretical studies to use the extended Hückel molecular orbitals as a preliminary step to determining the molecular orbitals by a more sophisticated method such as the CNDO/2 method and ab initio quantum chemistry methods. Since the extended Hückel basis set is fixed, the monoparticle calculated wavefunctions must be ...

  3. Möbius aromaticity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Möbius_aromaticity

    A Hückel-Möbius aromaticity switch (2007) has been described based on a 28 pi-electron porphyrin system: [11] [note 2] The phenylene rings in this molecule are free to rotate forming a set of conformers: one with a Möbius half-twist and another with a Hückel double-twist (a figure-eight configuration) of roughly equal energy.

  4. Hückel method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hückel_method

    The Hückel method or Hückel molecular orbital theory, proposed by Erich Hückel in 1930, is a simple method for calculating molecular orbitals as linear combinations of atomic orbitals. The theory predicts the molecular orbitals for π-electrons in π-delocalized molecules , such as ethylene , benzene , butadiene , and pyridine .

  5. Möbius–Hückel concept - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Möbius–Hückel_concept

    Möbius–Hückel correlation diagram; two modes of butadiene to cyclobutene conversion. It has been noted that for every degeneracy along a reaction coordinate there is a molecular orbital crossing. [4] Thus for the butadiene to cyclobutene conversion, the two Möbius (here conrotatory) and Hückel (here disrotatory) modes are shown in Figure 5.

  6. Semi-empirical quantum chemistry method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semi-empirical_quantum...

    The NOTCH method [26] includes many new, physically-motivated terms compared to the NDDO family of methods, is much less empirical than the other semi-empirical methods (almost all of its parameters are determined non-empirically), provides robust accuracy for bonds between uncommon element combinations, and is applicable to ground and excited ...

  7. Pariser–Parr–Pople method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pariser–Parr–Pople_method

    Previous methods existed—such as the Hückel method which led to Hückel's rule—but were limited in their scope, application and complexity, as is the Extended Hückel method. This approach was developed in the 1950s by Rudolph Pariser with Robert Parr and co-developed by John Pople .

  8. Environmental Health

    images.huffingtonpost.com/2009-01-27-1476069x82.pdf

    Background Chlorine and caustic soda are produced at chlor-alkali plants using mercury cells or the increasingly popular membrane technology that is mercury free and more energy-

  9. Computational chemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computational_chemistry

    Primitive semi-empirical methods were designed even before, where the two-electron part of the Hamiltonian is not explicitly included. For π-electron systems, this was the Hückel method proposed by Erich Hückel, and for all valence electron systems, the extended Hückel method proposed by Roald Hoffmann.