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Journal ArticleDOI

Rate Constants for the Addition of 2-Hydroxy-2-propyl Radicals to Alkenes in Solution studied by laser flash photolysis

11 Aug 1997-Helvetica Chimica Acta (WILEY‐VCH Verlag GmbH)-Vol. 80, Iss: 5, pp 1363-1374
TL;DR: In this article, the absolute rate constants for the addition of the highly nucleophilic 2-hydroxy-2-propyl radical to eight fast-reacting 1-and 1,1-disubstituted alkenes in MeOH at room temperature have been determined by laser flash photolysis.
Abstract: Absolute rate constants for the addition of the highly nucleophilic 2-hydroxy-2-propyl radical to eight fast-reacting 1- and 1,1-disubstituted alkenes in MeOH at room temperature have been determined by laser flash photolysis. Also the absorption spectra of the 2-hydroxy-2-propyl and the benzylic and alkyl-type adduct radicals are presented. The rate constants were obtained using various methods for the analysis of the kinetic traces and support earlier findings.
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The analysis leads to a partial revision of the previous qualitative rules, and it more clearly exhibits the interplay of the reaction enthalpy effects, polar charge-transfer contributions, and steric substituent effects on the reaction energy barrier.
Abstract: The successful exploitation of syntheses involving the generation of new carbon-carbon bonds by radical reactions rests on some prior knowledge of the rate constants for the addition of carbon-centered radicals to alkenes and other unsaturated molecules, and of the factors controlling them. Two former classical reviews in Angewandte Chemie by Tedder (1982) and by Giese (1983) provided mechanistic insight and led to various qualitative rules on the complex interplay of enthalpic, polar, and steric effects. In the meantime, the field has experienced very rapid progress: many more experimental absolute rate constants have become available, and there have been major advances in the efficiency and reliability of quantum-chemical methods for the accurate calculation of transition structures, reaction barriers, and reaction enthalpies. Herein we review this progress, recommend suitable experimental and theoretical procedures, and display representative data series for radical additions to alkenes. On this basis, and guided by the pictorial tool of the state-correlation diagram for radical additions, we then offer a new and more stringent quantification of the controlling factors. Our analysis leads to a partial revision of the previous qualitative rules, and it more clearly exhibits the interplay of the reaction enthalpy effects, polar charge-transfer contributions, and steric substituent effects on the reaction energy barrier. The various contributions are cast into the form of new, simple, and physically meaningful but non-linear, predictive equations for the preestimation of rate constants. These equations prove successful in several tests but call for additional theoretical and experimental foundation. The kinetics of related reactions such as polymer propagation, copolymerization, and the addition of radicals to alkynes and aromatic compounds is shown to follow the same principles.

578 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Absolute rate constants for the cross-coupling reaction of several carbon-centered radicals with various nitroxides and their temperature dependence have been determined in liquids by kinetic absorption spectroscopy.
Abstract: Absolute rate constants for the cross-coupling reaction of several carbon-centered radicals with various nitroxides and their temperature dependence have been determined in liquids by kinetic absorption spectroscopy. The rate constants range from <2 × 105 M-1 s-1 to 2.3 × 109 M-1 s-1 and depend strongly on the structure of the nitroxide and the carbon-centered radical. Grossly, they decrease with increasing rate constant of the cleavage of the corresponding alkoxyamine. In many cases, the temperature dependence shows a non-Arrhenius behavior. A model assuming a short-lived intermediate that is hindered to form the coupling product by an unfavorable activation entropy leads to a satisfactory analytic description. However, the behavior is more likely due to a barrierless single-step reaction with a low exothermicity where the free energy of activation is dominated by a large negative entropy term.

174 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the photochemistry and photophysics of a series of derivatives of 2-hydroxy-2-methyl-1-phenyl propanone, a model photoinitiator for free radical polymerization, were investigated.
Abstract: Time-resolved laser flash spectroscopy with transient detection by time-resolved UV−vis, IR, and EPR has been employed to investigate the photochemistry and photophysics of a series of derivatives of 2-hydroxy-2-methyl-1-phenyl propanone, a model photoinitiator for free radical polymerization. H, Cl, and F substituents at the para position promote the n,π* nature of the lowest triplet state and favor fast and efficient α-cleavage from T1 upon irradiation. In contrast, dimethylamino and thioether substitution in the para position of the benzoyl moiety change the configuration of the lowest triplet states into a π,π* and are characterized by a lack of α-cleavage from T1. Alkoxy substitution in the para position represents an intermediate for which α-cleavage occurs efficiently, but at a relatively slow rate. Alkylation of the 2-hydroxy group promotes fast α-cleavage upon irradiation (picosecond time scale), in contrast to the analogous ester derivative for which slow cleavage was observed (microsecond time ...

139 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results support a mechanism in which the alpha-cleavage occurs from the triplet excited state that has a lifetime less than or equal to the singlet excited state.
Abstract: A series of substituted benzoyl radicals has been generated by laser flash photolysis of alpha-hydroxy ketones, alpha-amino ketones, and acyl and bis(acyl)phosphine oxides, all of which are used commercially as photoinitiators in free radical polymerizations. The benzoyl radicals have been studied by fast time-resolved infrared spectroscopy. The absolute rate constants for their reaction with n-butylacrylate, thiophenol, bromotrichloromethane and oxygen were measured in acetonitrile solution. The rate constants of benzoyl radical addition to n-butylacrylate range from 1.3 x 10(5) to 5.5 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) and are about 2 orders of magnitude lower than for the n-butylacrylate addition to the counterradicals that are produced by alpha-cleavage of the investigated ketones. Density functional theoretical calculations have been performed in order to rationalize the observed reactivities of the initiating radicals. Calculations of the phosphorus-centered radicals generated by photolysis of an acyl and bis(acyl)phosphine oxide suggest that P atom Mulliken spin populations are an indicator of the relative reactivities of the phosphorus-centered radicals. The alpha-cleavage of (2,4,6-trimethylbenzoyl)phosphine oxide was studied by picosecond pump-probe and nanosecond step-scan time-resolved infrared spectroscopy. The results support a mechanism in which the alpha-cleavage occurs from the triplet excited state that has a lifetime less than or equal to the singlet excited state.

121 citations

References
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Book
01 Jan 1989

514 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the relative importance of bond strength, steric effects, and polarity in determining the rate and orientation of free radical subsitution and free radical addition reaction is considered.
Abstract: The relative importance of bond strength, steric effects, and polarity in determining the rate and orientation of free radical subsitution and free radical addition reaction is considered. The factors which control substitution reaction (radical transfer reaction) are gathered together as five “rules”, and a similar five “rules” are proposed for addition rections. These “rules” are shown to be special cases of two “laws” which govern all free radical reactions.

325 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A set of band pass filters for the 2400–3800A region of the ultraviolet is developed, which have a half-width of 200A and a maximum transmission of 30 percent, on the average.
Abstract: The problems involved in the development of ultraviolet transmission filters are discussed and criteria of stability, efficiency, and ease of preparation are applied to the materials suggested by previous workers. By the selection of the most suitable previous filters and the introduction of several new filters, a set of band pass filters for the 2400–3800A region of the ultraviolet is developed. These have a half-width of 200A and a maximum transmission of 30 percent, on the average. Quantitative spectrophotometric data are given for all components and filter combinations used. Suggestions are made for the further development of these tools.

263 citations