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Kinetic Acidities in the Condensed Phase

Kinetic Acidities in the Condensed Phase. For very weak acids, it is not always possible to establish proton-transfer equilibria in solution because the carbanions are too basic to be stable in the solvent system or the rate of establishing the equilibrium is too slow. In these cases, workers have turned to kinetic methods that rely on the assumption of a Brpnsted correlation between the rate of proton transfer and the acidity of the hydrocarbon. In other words, log k for isotope exchange is linearly related to the pK of the hydrocarbon (Eq. 13). The a value takes into account the fact that factors that stabilize a carbanion generally are only partially realized at the transition state for proton transfer (there is only partial charge development at that point) so the rate is less sensitive to structural effects than the pAT. As a result, a values are expected to be between zero and one. Once the correlation in Eq. 13 is established for species of known pK, the relationship can be used with kinetic data to extrapolate to values for species of unknown pAT. [Pg.94]

As noted above, internal return can be a problem in kinetic acidity measurements, but Streitwieser et al. showed that this is not a major impediment in cyclohexyl- [Pg.94]

As noted in Section 4.3.3, solvation has marked effects on the stability of nitro-substituted carbanions. [Pg.96]

In a novel kinetic approach, Dorfman et al. developed methods for rapidly generating very reactive carbanions such as the benzyl anion in solvent mixtures containing water and alcohols. With pulsed radiolysis techniques, they have been able to study the fast and very exothermic reactions of carbanions with these solvents. The studies have shown that despite the high exothermicity, the protonation is not diffusion controlled and depends on the nature of the carbanion s counterion. [Pg.96]




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Acids phase

Condensed phases

Kinetic acidity

Phase condensation

Phase kinetic

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