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Kinetic isotope effects arylation

A distinction between these four possibilities can be made on the basis of the kinetic isotope effect. There is no isotope effect in the arylation of deuterated or tritiated benzenoid compounds with dibenzoyl peroxide, thereby ruling out mechanisms in which a C5— bond is broken in the rate-determining step of the substitution. Paths (ii) and (iii,b) are therefore eliminated. In path (i) the first reaction, Eq. (6), is almost certain to be rate-determining, for the union of tw o radicals, Eq. (7), is a process of very low activation energy, while the abstraction in which a C—H bond is broken would require activation. More significant evidence against this path is that dimers, Arz, should result from it, yet they are never isolated. For instance, no 4,4 -dinitrobiphenyl is formed during the phenylation of... [Pg.136]

However, measurements of substituent effects supported the hypothesis that the aryl cation is a key intermediate in dediazoniations, provided that they were interpreted in an appropriate way (Zollinger, 1973a Ehrenson et al., 1973 Swain et al., 1975 a). We will first consider the activation energy and then discuss the influence of substituents, as well as additional data concerning the aryl cation as a metastable intermediate (kinetic isotope effects, influence of water acitivity in hydroxy-de-di-azoniations). Finally, the cases of dediazoniation in which the rate of reaction is first-order with regard to the concentration of the nucleophile will be critically evaluated. [Pg.167]

Important additional evidence for aryl cations as intermediates comes from primary nitrogen and secondary deuterium isotope effects, investigated by Loudon et al. (1973) and by Swain et al. (1975 b, 1975 c). The kinetic isotope effect kH/ki5 measured in the dediazoniation of C6H515N = N in 1% aqueous H2S04 at 25 °C is 1.038, close to the calculated value (1.040-1.045) expected for complete C-N bond cleavage in the transition state. It should be mentioned, however, that a partial or almost complete cleavage of the C — N bond, and therefore a nitrogen isotope effect, is also to be expected for an ANDN-like mechanism, but not for an AN + DN mechanism. [Pg.169]

Abeywickrema and Beckwith162 have measured the primary hydrogen-deuterium kinetic isotope effect for the reaction between an aryl radical and tributyltin hydride. The actual isotope effect was determined by reacting tributyltin hydride and deuteride with the ort/ro-alkcnylphcnyl radical generated from 2-(3-butenyl)bromobenzene (equation 111). [Pg.818]

The exo and the endo ring closures (the kc reactions) are in competition with the aryl radical-tributyltin hydride transfer (the ks or ku reaction). These workers162 used this competition to determine the primary hydrogen-deuterium kinetic isotope effect in the hydride transfer reaction between the aryl radical and tributyltin hydride and deuteride. [Pg.818]

This method gave a primary hydrogen-deuterium kinetic isotope effect of 1.3 for the reaction between the aryl radical and tributyltin hydride. This isotope effect is smaller than the isotope effect of 1.9 which San Filippo and coworkers reported for the reaction between the less reactive alkyl radicals and tributyltin hydride163 (vide infra). The smaller isotope effect of 1.3 in the aryl radical reaction is reasonable, because an earlier transition state with less hydrogen transfer, and therefore a smaller isotope effect164, should be observed for the reaction with the more reactive aryl radicals. [Pg.820]

An enantioselective imino-ene reaction was developed by Lectka to provide ct-amino acid derivatives.27 Aryl alkenes (cr-methyl styrene, tetralene), aliphatic alkenes (methylene cyclohexane), and heteroatom-containing enes, all gave high yields and high ee s of the homoallylic amides (Equation (17)). The mechanism of this reaction has been proposed to proceed through a concerted pathway. This mechanism is evidenced by a large kinetic isotope effect observed in the transfer of H(D). [Pg.564]

Deng and co-workers have also applied the cinchona derivatives to the kinetic resolution of protected a-amino acid N-carboxyanhydrides 51 [48]. A variety of alkyl and aryl-substituted amino acids may be prepared with high se-lectivities (krei=23-170, see Scheme 10). Hydrolysis of the starting material, in the presence of the product and catalyst, followed by extractive workup allows for recovery of ester, carboxylic acid, and catalyst. The catalyst may be recycled with little effect on selectivity (run 1, krei=114 run 2, krei=104). The reaction exhibits first-order dependence on methanol and catalyst and a kinetic isotope effect (A MeOH/ MeOD=l-3). The authors postulate that this is most consistent with a mechanism wherein rate-determining attack of alcohol is facilitated by (DHQD)2AQN acting as a general base. 5-Alkyl 1,3-dioxolanes 52 may also... [Pg.200]

The results in Table 3 were explained as shown in Scheme 4. From the fact that no kinetic isotope effect was observed in the reaction of phenyl-substituted disilenes with alcohols (Table 1), it is assumed that the addition reactions of alcohols to phenyltrimethyl-disilene proceed by an initial attack of the alcoholic oxygen on silicon (nucleophilic attack at silicon), followed by fast proton transfer via a four-membered transition state. As shown in Scheme 4, the regioselectivity is explained in terms of the four-membered intermediate, where stabilization of the incipient silyl anion by the phenyl group is the major factor favoring the formation of 26 over 27. It is well known that a silyl anion is stabilized by aryl group(s)443. Thus, the product 26 predominates over 27. However, it should be mentioned that steric effects also favor attack at the less hindered SiMe2 end of the disilene, thus leading to 26. [Pg.836]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.243 ]




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