Literature DB >> 16833963

Vapor pressure and intramolecular hydrogen bonding in fluorotelomer alcohols.

Paul J Krusic1, Alexander A Marchione, Fredric Davidson, Mary A Kaiser, Chien-Ping C Kao, Raymond E Richardson, Miguel Botelho, Robert L Waterland, Robert C Buck.   

Abstract

Vapor pressure and aqueous solubility are important parameters used to estimate the potential for transport of chemical substances in the atmosphere. For fluorotelomer alcohols (FTOHs), currently under scrutiny by environmental scientists as potential precursors of persistent perfluorocarboxylates (PFCAs), vapor pressure is the more significant property since these compounds are only very sparingly soluble in water. We have measured the vapor pressures of a homologous series of fluorotelomer alcohols, F(CF2CF2)nCH2CH2OH (n = 2-5), in the temperature range 21-250 degrees C by three independent methods: (a) a method suitable for very low vapor pressures at ambient temperatures (gas-saturation method), (b) an improved boiling point method at controlled pressures (Scott method), and (c) a novel method, requiring milligram quantities of substance, based on gas-phase NMR, a technique largely unfamiliar to chemists and holding promise for studies of relevance to environmental chemistry. The concordant values obtained indicate that recently published vapor pressure data overestimate the vapor pressure at ambient temperature, and therefore the volatility, of this series of fluorinated compounds. It was suggested that substantial intramolecular -O-H...F- hydrogen bonding between the hydroxylic proton and the two fluorines next to the ethanol moiety was responsible for their putative high volatility. Therefore, we have used gas-phase NMR, gas-phase FTIR, 2D NMR heteronuclear Overhauser effect measurements, and high-level ab initio computations to investigate the intramolecular hydrogen bonding in fluorotelomer alcohols. Our studies unequivocally show that hydrogen bonding of this type is not significant and cannot contribute to and cause unusual volatility. The substantially lower vapor pressure at ambient temperatures than previously reported resulting from our work is important in developing a valid understanding of the environmental transport behavior of this class of compounds.

Entities:  

Year:  2005        PMID: 16833963     DOI: 10.1021/jp0502961

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem A        ISSN: 1089-5639            Impact factor:   2.781


  2 in total

1.  Field-testing polyethylene passive samplers for the detection of neutral polyfluorinated alkyl substances in air and water.

Authors:  Erik Dixon-Anderson; Rainer Lohmann
Journal:  Environ Toxicol Chem       Date:  2018-11-05       Impact factor: 3.742

2.  Vapor pressure of nine perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) determined using the Knudsen Effusion Method.

Authors:  Mengke Zhang; Kyle Yamada; Stephen Bourguet; Jennifer Guelfo; Eric M Suuberg
Journal:  J Chem Eng Data       Date:  2020-04-21       Impact factor: 2.694

  2 in total

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