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Reaction diffusion solvent effects

Most of the chemical reactions presented in this book have been studied in homogeneous solutions. This chapter presents a conceptual and theoretical framework for these processes. Some of the matters involve principles, such as diffusion-controlled rates and applications of TST to questions of solvent effects on reactivity. Others have practical components as well, especially those dealing with salt effects and kinetic isotope effects. [Pg.197]

Reactions in solution proceed in a similar manner, by elementary steps, to those in the gas phase. Many of the concepts, such as reaction coordinates and energy barriers, are the same. The two theories for elementary reactions have also been extended to liquid-phase reactions. The TST naturally extends to the liquid phase, since the transition state is treated as a thermodynamic entity. Features not present in gas-phase reactions, such as solvent effects and activity coefficients of ionic species in polar media, are treated as for stable species. Molecules in a liquid are in an almost constant state of collision so that the collision-based rate theories require modification to be used quantitatively. The energy distributions in the jostling motion in a liquid are similar to those in gas-phase collisions, but any reaction trajectory is modified by interaction with neighboring molecules. Furthermore, the frequency with which reaction partners approach each other is governed by diffusion rather than by random collisions, and, once together, multiple encounters between a reactant pair occur in this molecular traffic jam. This can modify the rate constants for individual reaction steps significantly. Thus, several aspects of reaction in a condensed phase differ from those in the gas phase ... [Pg.146]

Whereas in acetonitrile the rate limiting step is an opening of the solvent shell of a reactant, in benzonitrile the back reaction of (5) between the protonated acridine orange cation (BH ) and the 3-methyl-4-nitrophenolate ion (A ) to form the ion pair is diffusion controlled (although the overall reaction to the neutral molecules is an endothermic process). Because of its lower dielectric constant than acetonitrile, the electrostatic interactions between reactants in benzonitrile outweigh specific solvent effects. In other words, in benzonitrile a rate limiting coupling of proton transfer to the reorientation of solvent dipoles does not occur and the measured rates are very fast. The ion recombination (I) + (II) in benzonitrile has a diffusion controlled specific rate (theoretical) k = 9 -1 -1... [Pg.79]

The activity of polymer-supported crown ethers depends on solvent. As shown in Fig. 11, rates for Br-I exchange reactions with catalysts 34 and 41 increased with a change in solvent from toluene to chlorobenzene. Since the reaction with catalyst 34 is limited substantially by intrinsic reactivity (Fig. 10), the rate increase must be due to an increase in intrinsic reactivity. The reaction with catalyst 41 is limited by both intrinsic reactivity and intraparticle diffusion (Fig. 10), and the rate increase from toluene to chlorobenzene corresponds with increases in both parameters. Solvent effects on rates with polymer-supported phase transfer catalysts differ from those with soluble phase transfer catalysts60. With the soluble catalysts rates increase (for a limited number of reactions) with decreased polarity of solvent60), while with the polymeric catalysts rates increase with increased polarity of solvent74). Solvents swell polymer-supported catalysts and influence the microenvironment of active sites as well as intraparticle diffusion. The microenvironment, especially hydration... [Pg.88]

There are some difficulties with testing this experimentally. The first is that it is not easy to match the same set of bases to electrophiles of quite different reactivity. A second is that the most readily available equilibrium constants characterizing the nucleophiles are pAias of the conjugate acids, which do not necessarily correlate reactivities toward carbocations. Thirdly, one should avoid reactions influenced by diffusion control. Finally, care has to be taken with steric and solvent effects. [Pg.107]

Han P, Bartels DM (1994) Encounters of H and D atoms with 02 in water relative diffusion and reaction rates. In Gauduel Y, Rossky P (eds) AIP conference proceedings 298. "Ultrafast reaction dynamics and solvent effects." AIP Press, New York, 72 pp Hasegawa K, Patterson LK (1978) Pulse radiolysis studies in model lipid systems formation and behavior of peroxy radicals in fatty acids. Photochem Photobiol 28 817-823 Herdener M, Heigold S, Saran M, Bauer G (2000) Target cell-derived superoxide anions cause efficiency and selectivity of intercellular induction of apoptosis. Free Rad Biol Med 29 1260-1271 Hildenbrand K, Schulte-Frohlinde D (1997) Time-resolved EPR studies on the reaction rates of peroxyl radicals of polyfacrylic acid) and of calf thymus DNA with glutathione. Re-examination of a rate constant for DNA. Int J Radiat Biol 71 377-385 Howard JA (1978) Self-reactions of alkylperoxy radicals in solution (1). In Pryor WA(ed) Organic free radicals. ACS Symp Ser 69 413-432... [Pg.188]

We consider in the following a bimolecular reaction, and the starting point for the evaluation of the solvent effects on the reaction is the situation where the reactants A and B have been brought together by diffusion in the same solvent cage . We then consider the reaction... [Pg.246]

Chapters 9-11 deal with elementary reactions in condensed phases. Chapter 9 is on the energetics of solvation and, for bimolecular reactions, the important interplay between diffusion and chemical reaction. Chapter 10 is on the calculation of reaction rates according to transition-state theory, including static solvent effects that are taken into account via the so-called potential-of-mean force. Finally, in Chapter 11, we describe how dynamical effects of the solvent may influence the rate constant, starting with Kramers theory and continuing with the more recent Grote-Hynes theory for... [Pg.385]

The dynamics of reversible onium ion formation has been studied by generating carbenium ions in the presence of nucleophiles using pulse radiolysis or flash photolysis, and following the rate of disappearance of the carbenium ions by UV. As discussed in Chapter 2, the kinetics of reaction of various electrophiles with nucleophiles obey a general reactiv-ity/selectivity relationship. The rates of reaction of various nucleophiles with carbenium ions are summarized in Table 9. These rates often approach diffusion controlled limits (k 10 ° mol-,-L-sec l). The rates are slower for less nucleophilic and less electrophilic compounds, and are particularly slow with sterically hindered amines such as lutidine (2,6-dimethylpyridine) [63]. Solvent effects are minimal when the reactions are diffusion controlled, although tributyl amines react slower with carbenium ions in more nucleophilic dichloroethane than in methylene chloride. [Pg.162]

Grampp and Jaenicke [36] have carried out detailed studies of solvent effects on the kinetics of electron transfer for a variety of organic redox couples. The kinetic data were obtained by electron spin resonance (ESR) line-broadening experiments for very fast reactions with rates close to the diffusion-limited value. Some of the reactions were clearly diabatic, and others adiabatic on the basis of the solvent effect. [Pg.373]

Photoinduced electron transfer is a subject characterised, particularly at the present time, by papers with a strongly theoretical content. Solvent relaxation and electron back transfer following photoinduced electron transfer in an ensemble of randomly distributed donors and acceptors, germinate recombination and spatial diffusion a comparison of theoretical models for forward and back electron transfer, rate of translational modes on dynamic solvent effects, forward and reverse transfer in nonadiabatic systems, and a theory of photoinduced twisting dynamics in polar solvents has been applied to the archetypal dimethylaminobenzonitrile in propanol at low temperatures have all been subjects of very detailed study. The last system cited provides an extended model for dual fluorescence in which the effect of the time dependence of the solvent response is taken into account. The mechanism photochemical initiation of reactions involving electron transfer, with particular reference to biological systems, has been discussed by Cusanovich. ... [Pg.14]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.361 , Pg.364 ]




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