Literature DB >> 17979296

Dramatic acceleration of the Menschutkin reaction and distortion of halide leaving-group order.

Keith J Stanger1, Jung-Jae Lee, Bradley D Smith.   

Abstract

Compared to structurally related linear trialkylamines, a simple macrocyclic amine with an anion-binding cavity exhibits very large rate enhancements (>10(5)) for stoichiometric N-alkylation with primary alkyl, allyl, and benzyl halides in the weakly polar solvent CDCl3. There is also a major distortion of the halide leaving-group order. For example, with benzyl halides the relative leaving-group order with a control amine is Cl (1) < Br (71) < I (160), whereas the leaving-group order with the macrocyclic amine is I (0.4) < Cl (1) < Br (8.5). Reaction with the macrocyclic amine is inhibited by the addition of DMSO, which is unusual because the Menschutkin reaction is normally enhanced by the presence of a polar aprotic solvent. Competitive inhibition studies indicate that the reaction proceeds through a prereaction complex. Effective molarities for the subsequent unimolecular N-alkylation step with 4-t-butylbenzyl halides are 4-t-BuBnCl (62,000 M) > 4-t-BuBnBr (2200 M) > 4-t-BuBnI (35 M); thus, the free energy of activation is selectively decreased for organohalides having smaller and more charge dense leaving groups. Likely reasons for this selective enhancement effect are: (a) increased transition-state stabilization due to hydrogen bonding in the macrocyclic pocket and (b) reduced entropic penalty in the transition state due to an increased fraction of prereaction complexes that are oriented in a near attack conformation. The study suggests that it should be possible to develop highly reactive macrocyclic amines that selectively sense or scavenge carcinogenic haloalkanes from the atmosphere.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17979296     DOI: 10.1021/jo702090p

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Org Chem        ISSN: 0022-3263            Impact factor:   4.354


  2 in total

1.  Exploring solvent effects upon the Menshutkin reaction using a polarizable force field.

Authors:  Orlando Acevedo; William L Jorgensen
Journal:  J Phys Chem B       Date:  2010-07-01       Impact factor: 2.991

2.  Antibacterial Properties of Charged TiN Surfaces for Dental Implant Application.

Authors:  Patrick H Carey; Fan Ren; Ziqi Jia; Christopher D Batich; Samira E A Camargo; Arthur E Clark; Valentin Craciun; Daniel W Neal; Josephine F Esquivel-Upshaw
Journal:  ChemistrySelect       Date:  2019-08-19       Impact factor: 2.109

  2 in total

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