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Reaction field charge transfer

The aimed synthetic designing of transition metal complexes or organometallic compounds as well as the choice of the wavelength of irradiation (ligand field, charge transfer, and inner ligand excitation, respectively) allows for tuning photoinduced catalytic and photoassisted reactions. [Pg.65]

Herep(r) is the radial distribution function (i. e., the probability that the two particles are at a distance r) in the solution and W r) is their interaction potential. Additional effects have to be taken into account when reactions involving charge transfer occur. In section (5.1), it was mentioned that polar transition states become stabilized in polar liquids, i.e., liquids with a large dielectric constant. This derives from the reorientation of the liquid molecules in the field generated by the dipole of the polar transition state. The cost to separate the charges, produced upon ion formation, has become reduced. The equation for the electrostatic interaction between two charges is... [Pg.198]

The ortho effect may consist of several components. The normal electronic effect may receive contributions from inductive and resonance factors, just as with tneta and para substituents. There may also be a proximity or field electronic effect that operates directly between the substituent and the reaction site. In addition there may exist a true steric effect, as a result of the space-filling nature of the substituent (itself ultimately an electronic effect). Finally it is possible that non-covalent interactions, such as hydrogen bonding or charge transfer, may take place. The role of the solvent in both the initial state and the transition state may be different in the presence of ortho substitution. Many attempts have been made to separate these several effects. For example. Farthing and Nam defined an ortho substituent constant in the usual way by = log (K/K ) for the ionization of benzoic acids, postulating that includes both electronic and steric components. They assumed that the electronic portion of the ortho effect is identical to the para effect, writing CTe = o-p, and that the steric component is equal to the difference between the total effect and the electronic effect, or cts = cr — cte- They then used a multiple LFER to correlate data for orrAo-substituted reactants. [Pg.336]

Though thermally stable, rhodium ammines are light sensitive and irradiation of such a complex at the frequency of a ligand-field absorption band causes substitution reactions to occur (Figure 2.47) [97]. The charge-transfer transitions occur at much higher energy, so that redox reactions do not compete. [Pg.120]

Laali and Lattimer (1989 see also Laali, 1990) observed arenediazonium ion/crown ether complexes in the gas phase by field desorption (FD) and by fast atom bombardment (FAB) mass spectrometry. The FAB-MS spectrum of benzenediazonium ion/18-crown-6 shows a 1 1 complex. In the FD spectrum, apart from the 1 1 complex, a one-cation/two-crown complex is also detected. Dicyclo-hexano-24-crown-6 appears to complex readily in the gas phase, whereas in solution this crown ether is rather poor for complexation (see earlier in this section) the presence of one or three methyl groups in the 2- or 2,4,6-positions respectively has little effect on the gas-phase complexation. With 4-nitrobenzenediazonium ion, 18-crown-6 even forms a 1 3 complex. The authors assume charge-transfer complexes such as 11.13 for all these species. There is also evidence for hydride ion transfer from the crown host within the 1 1 complex, and for either the arenediazonium ion or the aryl cation formed from it under the reaction conditions in the gas phase in tandem mass spectrometry (Laali, 1990). [Pg.301]

It is particularly difficult to study charge transfer reactions by the usual internal ionization method since the secondary ions produced will always coincide with ions produced in primary ionization processes. Indeed these primary ions frequently constitute the major fraction of the total ion current, and the small intensity changes originating from charge transfer reactions are difficult to detect. For example, Field and Franklin (5) were unable to detect any charge transfer between Xe + and CH4 by the internal ionization method although such reactions have been observed using other techniques (3, 9,22). [Pg.162]

The field of modified electrodes spans a wide area of novel and promising research. The work dted in this article covers fundamental experimental aspects of electrochemistry such as the rate of electron transfer reactions and charge propagation within threedimensional arrays of redox centers and the distances over which electrons can be transferred in outer sphere redox reactions. Questions of polymer chemistry such as the study of permeability of membranes and the diffusion of ions and neutrals in solvent swollen polymers are accessible by new experimental techniques. There is hope of new solutions of macroscopic as well as microscopic electrochemical phenomena the selective and kinetically facile production of substances at square meters of modified electrodes and the detection of trace levels of substances in wastes or in biological material. Technical applications of electronic devices based on molecular chemistry, even those that mimic biological systems of impulse transmission appear feasible and the construction of organic polymer batteries and color displays is close to industrial use. [Pg.81]

Many of the processes that are familiar from ordinary electrochemistry have an analog at ITIES so these form a wide field of study. We limit ourselves to a brief introduction into a few important topics thermodynamics, double-layer properties, and charge-transfer reactions. Further details can be found in several good review articles... [Pg.154]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.415 , Pg.448 ]




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