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Hydroxy nitrate alkanes

A range of transformation products has been identified from simulated reactions of alkanes. These include alkyl nitrates by reactions that have already been given, but also include a range of hydroxy-carbonyls that are summarized in Table 1.2 (Reisen et al. 2005). [Pg.17]

Gasoline hydrocarbons volatilized to the atmosphere quickly undergo photochemical oxidation. The hydrocarbons are oxidized by reaction with molecular oxygen (which attacks the ring structure of aromatics), ozone (which reacts rapidly with alkenes but slowly with aromatics), and hydroxyl and nitrate radicals (which initiate side-chain oxidation reactions) (Stephens 1973). Alkanes, isoalkanes, and cycloalkanes have half-lives on the order of 1-10 days, whereas alkenes, cycloalkenes, and substituted benzenes have half- lives of less than 1 day (EPA 1979a). Photochemical oxidation products include aldehydes, hydroxy compounds, nitro compounds, and peroxyacyl nitrates (Cupitt 1980 EPA 1979a Stephens 1973). [Pg.107]

Vicinal oxyamination. In the presence of catalytic amounts (1%) of osmium tetroxide the trihydrate of chloramine-T reacts with alkanes to form vicinal hydroxy />-toluenesulfonamides (equation I). The effective reagent is considered to be (1). In some instances addition of silver nitrate was found to be advantageous. ... [Pg.132]

Oxalic and malonic acids, as well as a-hydroxy acids, easily react with cerium(IV) salts (Sheldon and Kochi, 1968). Simple alkanoic acids are much more resistant to attack by cerium(IV) salts. However, silver(I) salts catalyze the thermal decarboxylation of alkanoic acids by ammonium hexanitratocerate(IV) (Nagori et al., 1981). Cerium(IV) carboxylates can be decomposed by either a thermal or a photochemical reaction (Sheldon and Kochi, 1968). Alkyl radicals are released by the decarboxylation reaction, which yields alkanes, alkenes, esters and carbon dioxide. The oxidation of substituted benzilic acids by cerium(IV) salts affords the corresponding benzilic acids in quantitative yield (scheme 19) (Hanna and Sarac, 1977). Trahanovsky and coworkers reported that phenylacetic acid is decarboxylated by reaction with ammonium hexanitratocerate(IV) in aqueous acetonitrile containing nitric acid (Trahanovsky et al., 1974). The reaction products are benzyl alcohol, benzaldehyde, benzyl nitrate and carbon dioxide. The reaction is also applicable to substituted phenylacetic acids. The decarboxylation is a one-electron process and radicals are formed as intermediates. The rate-determining step is the decomposition of the phenylacetic acid/cerium(IV) complex into a benzyl radical and carbon dioxide. [Pg.323]


See other pages where Hydroxy nitrate alkanes is mentioned: [Pg.298]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.827]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.298 ]




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