Aromatic sulphonation. Part 76. Sulphonation in sulphuric acid of ω-phenylalkanes containing the NH3+, NMe3+, or NO2substituent at position 1. Comparison of the side-chain NH3+, NMe3+, NO2, SO3H, and OSO3H substituent effects

Author(s):  
Rob Bregman ◽  
Hans Cerfontain
1980 ◽  
Vol 35 (7) ◽  
pp. 934-936 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Radeglia ◽  
S. L. Spassov ◽  
R. Stefanova ◽  
S. D. Sofia

Carbon-13 chemical shifts have been measured of para-substituted 3-phenyl propanoic acid methyl esters. The substituent-induced 13C shifts of the side chain were related to Hammett substituent effects by the dual substituent parameter method. The transmission of substituent effects and the factors that influence 13C shifts are discussed


1981 ◽  
Vol 59 (17) ◽  
pp. 2642-2649 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisabeth A. Dixon ◽  
Alfred Fischer ◽  
Frank P. Robinson

19F substituent chemical shifts (SCS) are reported for a series of twenty-one 3- and 4-substituted 1-fluoromethylnaphthalenes. The fluoromethylnaphthalenes exhibit an inverse SCS dependence: electron-withdrawing substituents produce upfield shifts. The results correlate well with SCS values previously reported for substituted benzyl fluorides. Hammett correlations are poor with conjugatively electron-withdrawing substituents exhibiting weaker than expected effects in the 3-position and stronger than expected effects in the 4-position. Dual substituent parameter analysis confirms the enhanced substituent–aromatic ring resonance interaction when the substituent is in the 4-position (ρR/ρI = 2). There is no evidence for enhanced resonance interaction between fluoromethyl side-chain and aromatic ring. The 19F chemical shift of 1-fluoromethylnaphthalene is markedly temperature dependent.


1986 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 564-572 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oldřich Pytela ◽  
Stanislava Štumrová ◽  
Miroslav Ludwig ◽  
Miroslav Večeřa

Ten 3-hydroxy-1-(X-phenyl)-3-phenyltriazines have been synthesized, and kinetics of their solvolysis have been measured in 40% (v/v) ethanol and sulphuric acid. The concept of kinetic acidity function has been generalized, its construction has been suggested, and the procedure has been applied to the solvolysis of 3-hydroxy-1,3-diphenyltriazenes. The kinetic acidity function found has been confronted with the H0 acidity function. The substituent effects have been evaluated with respect to mechanism of the acid catalyzed solvolysis.


1985 ◽  
Vol 63 (12) ◽  
pp. 3618-3630 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. A. Bell ◽  
R. Faggiani ◽  
C. J. L. Lock ◽  
R. A. McLeod

A series of E and Z isomers of substituted 4-(1-ethoxyethylidene)-5-oxazolones and thiazolones have been prepared and their 1H and 13C spectra recorded. The vinylic methyl 1H chemical shifts showed minimal differences between E and Z isomers whereas the vinylic OCH21H signals differed by 0.15–0.43 ppm, with the Z isomer being consistently the more deshielded. Both vinylic methyl and OCH2 groups showed different 13C resonances for each isomer, with the Z isomers being the more deshielded. The Z geometry was conclusively defined for one isomer of 4-(1-ethoxyethylidene)-2-phenyl-5-oxazolone, 5, by X-ray crystallography and this was sufficient to assign the geometry of the remaining pairs of E and Z isomers. Oxazolone 5 has the space group P21/n and cell dimensions a = 9.219(3), b = 19.899(5), c = 7.459(1) Å, β = 118.01(2)°, and has four formula units in the unit cell. Intensities were measured with use of MoKα radiation and a Nicolet P3 diffractometer. The crystal structure was determined by standard methods and refined to R1 = 0.0709, R2 = 0.0696 based on 1419 independent reflections. The molecule is essentially planar and most bond lengths and angles are normal. Exceptions are the very short C(olefin)—O(ether) bond (1.339(4) Å) and the large ether C—O—C angle (122.1(3)°) caused by extreme delocalization in the O(ether)CCCO(carbonyl) system. The planarity causes a number of strong intramolecular repulsive interactions, causing an exceptionally small external olefin angle, O(ether)CC(methyl), of 108.1(4)°. The ethoxyl side chain of 5 adopts a conformation in the solid state which places the methylene of the OCH2 group adjacent to the oxazole ring nitrogen. This conformation is proposed to persist in solution phases and is consistent with the observed 13C chemical shifts and known γ and δ substituent effects.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document