The strength of a chemical bond can be defined as the change in enthalpy when a bond is homolytically broken into two radicals. Bond dissociation energy is thus the measure of the strength of a bond and, while it is temperature dependent, it can be calculated by DFT or ab initio methods.

In this tutorial we’re going to calculate the C-H bond dissociation energy (BDE) in the methane (CH4) molecule, one of the strongest aliphatic bonds in organic chemistry. To that end, we start from the geometry optimization and frequencies calculation of CH4 and the radicals product of dissociation in equation 1.

CH4 —> CH3. + H. (equation 1)

For the sake of reproducibility, please know that I’m using the wB97XD/cc-pVDZ level of theory, but a suitable reference or benchmark should be consulted to choose the ideal level of theory for your molecules under study. Bear also in mind that the multiplicity changes from singlet to doublet in the radical products. Since one of our fragments is just a Hydrogen atom optimization and frequency analysis becomes superfluous, but if we’re analyzing a molecular fragment then those steps cannot be omitted.

Now, since the definition of BDE is of enthalpic nature, the not-corrected electronic energies could be a good approximation, but conceptually wrong. We should look into the thermochemistry section of the output, and thus this is why the freq keyword is paramount to these calculations, more specifically to the line labeled as “Sum of electronic and thermal Enthalpies=”. So, for the calculations made at 0 K we have the following values:

FragmentH (0K)
[Hartrees]
CH4-40.453173
CH3. -39.78826
H. -0.501881036
ΣH(prods) – ΣH(reactants)0.163031964

The resulting value of 0.163 a.u. translates to 102.304 kcal/mol (or 428.039 kJ/mol) while the reported value at 298 K is 103.011 kcal/mol (431 kJ/mol), this is a very good agreement for such a strong bond, but the agreement will vary with the sizes of the fragments and the level of theory.

Now, suppose you want to calculate BDE at a given temperature, say 300 K, you can just type the keyword temperature=300 in the route section to set the value of T at which the thermochemistry analysis is performed after the frequencies calculations. With this value the obtained values shift in the following way:

FragmentH (300K)
[Hartrees]
CH4-40.453148
CH3. -39.788232
H. -0.501881036
ΣH300(prods) – ΣH300(reactants)0.163034964

This seemingly similar value corresponds to 102.306 kcal/mol (428.048 kJ/mol), a slight change but nonetheless the T value can be incorporated into these calculations.

Now, these enthalpy values, usually reported in kcal/mol (or alternatively in kJ/mol) refer to the breakage of a given bond per mole of the reagent under study, but the energy of a single bond should be reported in eV by using the conversion factor of 23.060 kcal/mol (96.485 kJ/mol).