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Fluorenylidene laser flash photolysis

Final resolution of these problems, particularly the complications from multiple matrix sites, came from investigations using spectroscopic methods with higher time resolution, viz. laser flash photolysis. Short laser pulse irradiation of diazofluorene (36) in cold organic glasses produced the corresponding fluorenylidene (37), which could be detected by UV/VIS spectroscopy. Now, in contrast to the results from EPR spectroscopy, single exponential decays of the carbene could be observed in matrices... [Pg.437]

Laser flash photolysis of phenylchlorodiazirine was used to measure the absolute rate constants for intermolecular insertion of phenylchlorocarbene into CH bonds of a variety of co-reactants. Selective stabilization of the carbene ground state by r-complexation to benzene was proposed to explain the slower insertions observed in this solvent in comparison with those in pentane. Insertion into the secondary CH bond of cyclohexane showed a primary kinetic isotope effect k ikY) of 3.8. l-Hydroxymethyl-9-fluorenylidene (79), generated by photolysis of the corresponding diazo compound, gave aldehyde (80) in benzene or acetonitrile via intramolecular H-transfer. In methanol, the major product was the ether, formed by insertion of the carbene into the MeO-H bond, and the aldehyde (80) was formed in minor amounts through H-transfer from the triplet carbene to give a triplet diradical which can relax to the enol. [Pg.263]

A number of minima corresponding to oxonium ylides and H-bonded structures were found on the potential-energy surface for reaction of singlet carbenes with water and alcohols." Laser flash photolysis revealed that the rates of reaction between cyclopentadienylidene or fluorenylidene and alcohols increased with alcohol acidity and had linear Bronsted plots with slopes of 0.061 and 0.082, respectively.100 These results point to protonation with a very early transition state or to concerted OH insertion. For tetrachlorocyclopentadienylidene, the results showed that ylide formation (100) is predominant. [Pg.236]

The potential of laser flash photolysis in the study of carbene reactions with heteroatoms has come to be recognized in recent years. A number of kinetic studies using this technique have been carried out with carbene precursors in nitrile solvents.122-127 An absorption band at 470 nm was observed in the laser flash photolysis of diazofluorene (246) in inert solvents. This band was assigned to triplet fluorenylidene (247). In acetonitrile, however, a second band was also detected at 400 nm and whose buildup is concurrent with the decay at 470 nm.122 Laser flash experiments in other nitrile solvents (i.e., benzonitrile and pivalonitrile) also produced a transient absorption band which is very similar to that observed in acetonitrile. The band at 400 nm was assigned to an intermediate nitrile ylide (248). This absorption could be quenched on addition of an electron-deficient olefin providing good support for its... [Pg.150]

An earlier experimental study involved the generation of benzylchlorocarbene, phenylchlorocarbene, methoxy-phenylcarbene, dimethylcarbene, cyclobutylidene, adamantylidene, and fluorenylidene by means of laser flash photolysis and their reactions with oxiranes and thiiranes <1998JA8681>. Absolute rate constants ranging from 10 to 10 ° M s at 22 °C were measured in acetonitrile and cyclohexane. Thermally generated dimethoxycarbene was found to be inefficient at abstracting oxygen or sulfur from an oxirane or a thiirane. [Pg.338]

Laser flash-photolysis investigations have been carried out for benzylchloro-carbene, phenylchlorocarbene, methoxyphenylcarbene and fluorenylidene, and some other carbenes, generated from diazirine, diazo and other precursors, in the presence of oxiranes and thiiranes. These carbenes abstract oxygen or sulfur atoms with bimolecular rate constants in the range 10 to 10 s ... [Pg.301]

Laser flash photolysis has, as usual, illuminated the problem. Jones and Rettig photodecomposed 9-diazofluorene (188) in hexafluorobenzene and cw-4-methyl-2-pentene mixtures, and showed that the degree of stereoselectivity in the cyclopropane products depended on the concentration of the alkene. Laser flash photolysis showed that the first detectable intermediate in the photolysis reaction is the triplet carbene, and suggests that the product studies are consistent with initial formation of a singlet fluorenylidene which has an extremely short life (less than 5 ns) before forming the triplet. The singlet can be trapped only by high alkene concentrations while the more stable triplet is easily trapped. [Pg.554]


See other pages where Fluorenylidene laser flash photolysis is mentioned: [Pg.285]    [Pg.317]    [Pg.317]    [Pg.336]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.412 ]




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