The Silicon-Directed Tiffeneau - Demjanov Reaction: Some Theoretical Studies

2004 ◽  
Vol 57 (9) ◽  
pp. 869 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melanie McClure ◽  
Carl Schiesser ◽  
Jonathan White

The Tiffeneau–Demjanov chain extension reaction was modelled using the B3LYP/6-31G* basis set for both diazonium and water leaving groups. The chain extension of 12 with the diazonium leaving group occurs with an early transition state, a low activation barrier, and very little participation by the silicon substituent. Chain extension of 15, involving displacement of the less reactive leaving group water, occurs with a later transition state, a significantly higher activation barrier, and with greater participation by the silicon substituent.

1981 ◽  
Vol 59 (20) ◽  
pp. 3016-3018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shune-Long Wu ◽  
Peter James Smith

The reaction of 2-aryl-1-phenylethylammonium salts with ethoxide in ethanol at 40 °C for five different amine leaving groups has been investigated. A significant dependence of the rate of reaction on the basicity of the leaving group was found. The variation of the primary hydrogen–deuterium isotope effect and pKa of the leaving group was not linear and it is concluded that the proton is less than one-half transferred to base at the transition state for reactions involving the best two leaving groups. In support of this conclusion is the observed opposite variation of kH/kD with ring substituents for the various leaving groups, i.e., for N-methylpyrrolidine, kH/kD = 4.58, 4.72, and 5.01 for p-Me, H, and p-Cl, respectively; for N-methylmorpholine, kH/kD = 6.13, 5.73, and 5.50 for p-Me, H, and p-Cl, respectively.


2013 ◽  
Vol 66 (8) ◽  
pp. 891 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole M. Cain ◽  
Josh L. Hixson ◽  
Dennis K. Taylor

Theoretical investigations on the treatment of bicyclic endoperoxides (1,2-dioxines) with ozone at the HF/6–31G*, MP2/6–31G* or 6–311G*, and DFT(B3LYP)/6–31G* levels of theory indicate that the estimated activation energies for formation of the possible endo-endo, endo-exo, exo-endo, or exo-exo transition states along with the formation of the primary ozonides and product ozonides are very sensitive to effects of electron correlation and basis set. This study suggests that MP2/6–311G* is the best level of theory for evaluating such systems. At the MP2/6–311G* level of theory it was found that the transition state for primary ozonide formation was lowest in energy when ozone approaches in an endo facial fashion with a further 3 kJ mol–1 stabilisation seen when the central oxygen within the primary ozonide protrudes outwards (exo) as opposed to inwards (endo). The product ozonides are predicted to be more stable than the combined starting materials by some 380–580 kJ mol–1 depending on the level of theory, clearly highlighting the substantive exothermic nature of this type of ozonolysis reaction.


1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (9) ◽  
pp. 1457-1467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter James Smith ◽  
Md. Amin

To investigate the effect of the leaving group on the elimination reaction of 1-phenylethylammonium ions with sodium ethoxide in ethanol at 60 °C, the reaction of seven different quaternary ammonium salts and their β-deuterated analogues with trimethylamine, N-methylpiperidine, N-methyldiethylamine, triethylamine, N,N-dimethylbenzylamine, tripropylamine, and N,N-diethylbenzylamine as leaving groups has been studied. In all cases the elimination, which was shown to proceed via the concerted E2 process, was accompanied by competing substitution reactions. Although a significant dependence of the rate of the elimination process on the nature of the leaving group was noted, there was not any linear correlation with the basicity of the amine leaving group. The primary hydrogen–deuterium kinetic isotope effect for the elimination process, (kH/kD)E, was found to increase initially with an increase of reaction rate, [Formula: see text] for substrates containing the leaving groups trimethylamine, N-methylpiperidine, N-methyldiethylamine, triethylamine, and N,N-dimethylbenzylamine; i.e., (kH/kD)E = 5.03, 5.26, 5.40, 5.83, and 5.85, respectively. A further increase in rate, using substrates with tripropylamine and N,N-diethylbenzylamine as leaving groups resulted in a decrease of the magnitude of the hydrogen–deuterium isotope effect; i. e., (kH/kD)E = 5.42 and 4.67, respectively. It is concluded that steric effects mainly determine leaving group ability. As well, it is concluded that the leaving group ability of the amine determines the structure of the E2 transition state. For the reaction of the poorer leaving groups, trimethylamine, N-methylpiperidine, and N-methyldiethylamine, the proton is morethan one-half transferred at the transition state while for reaction involving the two best leaving groups, tripropylamine and N,N-diethylbenzylamine, the Cβ—H bond is lessthan one-half broken at the transition state. The conclusions are considered in the light of the More O'Ferrall – Jencks potential energy surface diagram. Keywords: elimination mechanism, transition state, isotope effects, leaving group, quaternary salts.


1980 ◽  
Vol 45 (8) ◽  
pp. 2171-2178
Author(s):  
Jiří Závada ◽  
Magdalena Pánková

Approximate rates of the competing syn- and anti-pathways have been determined in t-C4H9OK-t-C4H9OH promoted elimination from two homologous series of tosylates: I-OTs trans-III (R = H, CH3, C2H5, n-C3H7, i-C3H7, t-C4H9) and II-OTs trans-IV (R = CH3, C2H5, n-C3H7, i-C3H7, t-C4H9). A comparison has been made with rates of the same processes in the (+) elimination of the corresponding trimethylammonium salts I-N(CH3)3 trans-III and (+) II-N(CH3)3 trans-IV. The title effect is demonstrated by a comparative analysis of the rate patterns obtained for the two leaving groups.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nazanin Kordestani ◽  
Hadi Amiri Rudbari ◽  
Alexandra R Fernandes ◽  
Luís R Raposo ◽  
André Luz ◽  
...  

To investigate the effect of different halogen substituents, leaving groups and the flexibility of ligand on the anticancer activity of copper complexes, sixteen copper(II) complexes with eight different tridentate Schiff-base...


Author(s):  
Ibon Alkorta ◽  
José Elguero

AbstractThis communication gives an overview of the relationships between four reactions that although related were not always perceived as such: SN2, Walden, Finkelstein, and Menshutkin. Binary interactions (SN2 & Walden, SN2 & Menshutkin, SN2 & Finkelstein, Walden & Menshutkin, Walden & Finkelstein, Menshutkin & Finkelstein) were reported. Carbon, silicon, nitrogen, and phosphorus as central atoms and fluorides, chlorides, bromides, and iodides as lateral atoms were considered. Theoretical calculations provide Gibbs free energies that were analyzed with linear models to obtain the halide contributions. The M06-2x DFT computational method and the 6-311++G(d,p) basis set have been used for all atoms except for iodine where the effective core potential def2-TZVP basis set was used. Concerning the central atom pairs, carbon/silicon vs. nitrogen/phosphorus, we reported here for the first time that the effect of valence expansion was known for Si but not for P. Concerning the lateral halogen atoms, some empirical models including the interaction between F and I as entering and leaving groups explain the Gibbs free energies.


Author(s):  
Ik-Hwan Um ◽  
Seungjae Kim

Second-order rate constants (kN) for reactions of p-nitrophenyl acetate (1) and S-p-nitrophenyl thioacetate (2) with OH‒ have been measured spectrophotometrically in DMSO-H2O mixtures of varying compositions at 25.0 ± 0.1 oC. The kN value increases from 11.6 to 32,800 M‒1s‒1 for the reactions of 1 and from 5.90 to 190,000 M‒1s‒1 for those of 2 as the reaction medium changes from H2O to 80 mol % DMSO, indicating that the effect of medium on reactivity is more remarkable for the reactions of 2 than for those of 1. Although 2 possesses a better leaving group than 1, the former is less reactive than the latter by a factor of 2 in H2O. This implies that expulsion of the leaving group is not advanced in the rate-determining transition state (TS), i.e., the reactions of 1 and 2 with OH‒ proceed through a stepwise mechanism, in which expulsion of the leaving group from the addition intermediate occurs after the rate-determining step (RDS). Addition of DMSO to H2O would destabilize OH‒ through electronic repulsion between the anion and the negative-dipole end in DMSO. However, destabilization of OH‒ in the ground state (GS) is not solely responsible for the remarkably enhanced reactivity upon addition of DMSO to the medium. The effect of medium on reactivity has been dissected into the GS and TS contributions through combination of the kinetic data with the transfer enthalpies (ΔΔHtr) from H2O to DMSO-H2O mixtures for OH‒ ion.


2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 193-202 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Zahra Sayyed-Alangi ◽  
Mohammad T. Baei

Minimum-energy and transition state geometries of 3-thioxoprop-2-enethial, 3-thioxoacrylaldehyde, 3-oxoprop-2-enethial, 3-selenoxoprop-2-enethial, 3-thioxoprop-2-eneselenal, 3-selenoxoprop-2-eneselenal, 3-oxoacrylaldehyde, 3-selenoxoacrylaldehyde and 3-oxoprop-2-eneselenal were calculated using HF, B3LYP and MP2 levels of theory and 6-31+G*basis set by rotation around the related -C-C- single bonds. In all of the above mentioned molecules, the s-trans conformation was obtained as the most stable conformer with the 180°dihedral angle, apart from 3-oxoprop-2-enethial and 3-thioxoprop-2-eneselenal which theirs-cisconformers were appeared more stability than related tos-transforms. Their perpendicular geometries, with torsional angles approximately 90°, were as transition state for conformational interconversion between the two global minima forms. Cyclic structures all of the above mentioned molecules were unstable than their linear forms.


2003 ◽  
Vol 02 (03) ◽  
pp. 357-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
CUNYUAN ZHAO ◽  
DONG-QI WANG ◽  
DAVID LEE PHILLIPS

We report a theoretical study of the cyclopropanation reactions of EtZnCHI, (EtZn)2CH EtZnCHZnI, and EtZnCIZnI radicals with ethylene. The mono-zinc and gem-dizinc radical carbenoids can undergo cyclopropanation reactions with ethylene via a two-step reaction mechanism similar to that previously reported for the CH2I and IZnCH2 radicals. The barrier for the second reaction step (ring closure) was found to be highly dependent on the leaving group of the cyclopropanation reaction. In some cases, the (di)zinc carbenoid radical undergoes cyclopropanation via a low barrier of about 5–7 kcal/mol on the second reaction step and this is lower than the CH2I radical reaction which has a barrier of about 13.5 kcal/mol for the second reaction step. Our results suggest that in some cases, zinc radical carbenoid species have cyclopropanation reaction barriers that can be competitive with their related molecular Simmons-Smith carbenoid species reactions and produce somewhat different cyclopropanated products and leaving groups.


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