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Biphenyl radical cation salts

Another view has recently been proposed by Wegner.Naphthalene and other simple aromarics can be oxidize electrochemi-cally to form monomelic radial cat n salts (Ar. X ) which have conductivities of 10 to 10 s/cm. The crystal structures of these reveal that the aromatic moieties form stacks, along which the charges and the electrons are presumably delocalized. The structure is formally analogous to that deduced for oxidized (doped) polyacetylene in which the polyene chains are arranged in stacks. This leads to the idea that intermolecular delocalization is the important feature which leads to high conductivity. Other data are consistent with this rationale. Biphenyl and terphenyl radical cation salts have crystal structures very similar to that of oxidized (doped) poly(p-phenylene lO). In the older literature oligoanilines (26) are reported upon iodine treatment to yield conductivities up to 1 s/cm the aniline moieties are stacked in these materials as well. Poly(N-vinyl-carbazole) (27) forms radical cation structures by oxidation with... [Pg.393]

The photosensitization of sulfonium salts leads to formation of sulfonium triplet, followed by homolytic cleavage with formation of a triplet radical pair of phenyl radical and dipheny lsulphinyl radical cation. The triplet pair reacts only after escaping the solvent cage, and it does not lead to formation of (phenylthio)biphenyl recombination products. [Pg.488]

Triplet sensitization of sulfonium salts proceeds exclusively by the homolytic pathway, and that the only arene escape product is benzene, not biphenyl or acetanilide. However, it is difficult to differentiate between the homolytic or heterolytic pathways for the cage reaction, formation of the isomeric halobiaryls. Our recent studies on photoinduced electron transfer reactions between naphthalene and sulfonium salts, have shown that no meta- rearrangement product product is obtained from the reaction of phenyl radical with diphenylsulfinyl radical cation. Similarly, it is expected that the 2- and 4-halobiaryl should be the preferred products from the homolytic fragments, the arene radical-haloarene radical cation pair. The heterolytic pathway generates the arene cation-haloarene pair, which should react less selectively and form the 3-halobiaryl, in addition to the other two isomers. The increased selectivity of 2-halobiaryl over 3-halobiaryl formation from photolysis of the diaryliodonium salts versus the bromonium or chloronium salts, suggests that homolytic cleavage is more favored for iodonium salts than bromonium or chloronium salts. This is also consistent with the observation that more of the escape aryl fragment is radical derived for diaryliodonium salts than for the other diarylhalonium salts. [Pg.88]


See other pages where Biphenyl radical cation salts is mentioned: [Pg.328]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.883]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.3702]    [Pg.507]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.298]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.393 ]




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Biphenyl cation

Cation-radical salts

Cationic salts

Radicals, cation-radical salts

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