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Dioxetane reaction

A similar mechanism produces an alternative to the acyl anion or dioxetan reactions for the aldehyde (16). [Pg.116]

Excitation appears to be general for this reaction but yields of excited products vary substantially with the substituent R. The highest yield reported is from tetramethyl-l,2-dioxetane [35856-82-7] (TMD) where the yield of triplet acetone is 50% of total acetone formed (18,19). Probably only one carbonyl of the two produced can be excited by the thermal decomposition, and TMD provides 100% of the possible yield of triplet acetone. Singlet excited acetone is also formed, but at the low yield of 0.1—0.3% (17—21). Other tetraaLkyldioxetanes behave similarly to TMD (22). [Pg.263]

In addition to ready thermal decomposition, 1,2-dioxetanes are also rapidly decomposed by transition metals (39), amines, and electron-donor olefins (10). However, these catalytic reactions are not chemiluminescent as determined by the temperature drop kinetic method. [Pg.265]

Dioxetanes are obtained from an a-halohydroperoxide by treatment with base (41), or reaction of singlet oxygen with an electron-rich olefin such as tetraethoxyethylene or 10,10 -dimethyl-9,9 -biacridan [23663-77-6] (16) (25,42). [Pg.265]

A number of chemiluminescent reactions may proceed through unstable dioxetane intermediates (12,43). For example, the classical chemiluminescent reactions of lophine [484-47-9] (18), lucigenin [2315-97-7] (20), and transannular peroxide decomposition. Classical chemiluminescence from lophine (18), where R = CgH, is derived from its reaction with oxygen in aqueous alkaline dimethyl sulfoxide or by reaction with hydrogen peroxide and a cooxidant such as sodium hypochlorite or potassium ferricyanide (44). The hydroperoxide (19) has been isolated and independentiy emits light in basic ethanol (45). [Pg.265]

Classical chemiluminescence from lucigenin (20) is obtained from its reaction with hydrogen peroxide in water at a pH of about 10 Qc is reported to be about 0.5% based on lucigenin, but 1.6% based on the product A/-methylacridone which is formed in low yield (46). Lucigenin dioxetane (17) has been prepared by singlet oxygen addition to an electron-rich olefin (16) at low temperature (47). Thermal decomposition of (17) gives of 1.6% (47). [Pg.265]

Dioxetane decomposition has also been proposed to account for chemiluminescence from other reactions (43), including gas-phase reactions of singlet oxygen with ethylene and vinyl ethers (53). [Pg.265]

The first detailed investigation of the reaction kinetics was reported in 1984 (68). The reaction of bis(pentachlorophenyl) oxalate [1173-75-7] (PCPO) and hydrogen peroxide cataly2ed by sodium saUcylate in chlorobenzene produced chemiluminescence from diphenylamine (DPA) as a simple time—intensity profile from which a chemiluminescence decay rate constant could be determined. These studies demonstrated a first-order dependence for both PCPO and hydrogen peroxide and a zero-order dependence on the fluorescer in accord with an earher study (9). Furthermore, the chemiluminescence quantum efficiencies Qc) are dependent on the ease of oxidation of the fluorescer, an unstable, short-hved intermediate (r = 0.5 /is) serves as the chemical activator, and such a short-hved species "is not consistent with attempts to identify a relatively stable dioxetane as the intermediate" (68). [Pg.266]

Characteristic reactions of singlet oxygen lead to 1,2-dioxetane (addition to olefins), hydroperoxides (reaction with aHyhc hydrogen atom), and endoperoxides (Diels-Alder "4 -H 2" cycloaddition). Many specific examples of these spectrally sensitized reactions are found iu reviews (45—48), earlier texts (15), and elsewhere iu the Engchpedia. [Pg.435]

The electrolysis of adamantylideneadamantane solutions affords the radical cation, which can add molecular (triplet) oxygen to give the peroxide radical anion, which can react with adamantylideneadamantane to give the 1,4-diradical and another molecule of adamantylideneadamantane radical cation. The latter reacts with oxygen, to continue the chain of the reaction, while the former cyclizes to the corresponding 1,2-dioxetane (Scheme 18) (81JA2098). [Pg.40]

Dioxetanes applications, 7, 484—485 electrophilic reactions, 7, 461 nucleophilic reactions, 7, 463-464 photochemical reactions, 7, 459 spectroscopy, 7, 455... [Pg.608]

Dioxetan-3-ones spectroscopy, 7, 455 synthesis, 7, 469, 476 thermal reactions, 7, 459... [Pg.608]

Reaction of triethylsilyl hydrotrfoxide with electron-rich olefins to gh/e dioxetanes that react IntrarTMlecularly with a keto group in the presence of t-txrtyidimethyl silyl triflateto afford 1,2,4 Inoxanes also oxydatnre cleavage ol alkenes Also used in cleavage ol olefins... [Pg.304]

One is the concerted decomposition of a dioxetanone structure that is proposed for the chemiluminescence and bioluminescence of both firefly luciferin (Hopkins et al., 1967 McCapra et al., 1968 Shimomura et al., 1977) and Cypridina luciferin (McCapra and Chang, 1967 Shimomura and Johnson, 1971). The other is the linear decomposition mechanism that has been proposed for the bioluminescence reaction of fireflies by DeLuca and Dempsey (1970), but not substantiated. In the case of the Oplopborus bioluminescence, investigation of the reaction pathway by 180-labeling experiments has shown that one O atom of the product CO2 derives from molecular oxygen, indicating that the dioxetanone pathway takes place in this bioluminescence system as well (Shimomura et al., 1978). It appears that the involvement of a dioxetane intermediate is quite widespread in bioluminescence. [Pg.87]

Cycloaddition reactions can occur with retention of configuration in the pseudoexcitation band (Sect 1.1) whereas [2jt H-2jtJ reactions are symmetry-forbidden in the delocalization band. Experimental evidence is available for the stereospecific [2-1-2] cycloaddition reactions between A and olefins with retention of configuration (Scheme 14) [82]. A perepoxide intermediate was reported to be trapped in the epoxide form [83] in the reaction of adamantylideneadamantane with singlet oxygen affording dioxetane derivatives [84]. [Pg.38]

Carotene cleavage enzymes — Two pathways have been described for P-carotene conversion to vitamin A (central and eccentric cleavage pathways) and reviewed recently. The major pathway is the central cleavage catalyzed by a cytosolic enzyme, p-carotene 15,15-oxygenase (BCO EC 1.13.1.21 or EC 1.14.99.36), which cleaves p-carotene at its central double bond (15,15 ) to form retinal. Two enzymatic mechanisms have been proposed (1) a dioxygenase reaction (EC 1.13.11.21) that requires O2 and yields a dioxetane as an intermediate and (2) a monooxygenase reaction (EC 1.14.99.36) that requires two oxygen atoms from two different sources (O2 and H2O) and yields an epoxide as an intermediate. ... [Pg.163]

The early stages in the oxidation of disilene have been treated theoretically for the parent molecule H2Si=SiH2.95 The first intermediate along the reaction coordinate is the open-chain trans diradical 64 (Scheme 16), which is in equilibrium with a gauche form, 65. From the latter, closure to the 1,2-dioxetane 66 would probably be rapid. The open-chain form can react with a second molecule of disilene to give the diradical 67, which could collapse into two molecules of the disilaoxirane 68. If similar steps are followed in the oxidation of 3, they must be quite rapid, since the relative configuration at the silicon atoms is maintained in both products, 59a and 61a.93... [Pg.265]


See other pages where Dioxetane reaction is mentioned: [Pg.492]    [Pg.492]    [Pg.337]    [Pg.788]    [Pg.712]    [Pg.495]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.492]    [Pg.492]    [Pg.337]    [Pg.788]    [Pg.712]    [Pg.495]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.263]    [Pg.265]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.194]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.608]    [Pg.608]    [Pg.363]    [Pg.376]    [Pg.380]    [Pg.382]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.492]    [Pg.257]    [Pg.1055]    [Pg.137]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.265]    [Pg.299]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.404]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.480 , Pg.484 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.480 , Pg.484 ]




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1,2-Dioxetanes reactions

1,2-Dioxetanes reactions

1,2-Dioxetans

1.2- Dioxetane

1.2- dioxetan

Cycloaddition reactions dioxetane intermediate

Dioxetanes, photochemical reactions

Quenching Reactions of Dioxetans

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