Literature DB >> 24117206

The α-effect in gas-phase SN2 reactions of microsolvated anions: methanol as a solvent.

Ditte L Thomsen1, Jennifer N Reece, Charles M Nichols, Steen Hammerum, Veronica M Bierbaum.   

Abstract

The α-effect, an enhanced reactivity of nucleophiles with a lone-pair adjacent to the reaction center, has been studied in solution for several decades. The gas-phase α-effect has recently been documented in studies of SN2 reactions as well as in competing reactions for both bare and microhydrated anions. In the present work we extend our studies of the significance of microsolvation on the α-effect, employing methanol as the solvent, in the expectation that the greater stability of the methanol cluster relative to the water cluster will lower the reactivity and thereby allow studies over a wider efficiency range. We compare the gas-phase reactivity of the microsolvated α-nucleophile HOO(-)(CH3OH) to that of microsolvated normal alkoxy nucleophiles, RO(-)(CH3OH) in reactions with CH3Cl and CH3Br. The results reveal enhanced reactivity of HOO(-)(CH3OH) toward both methyl halides relative to the normal nucleophiles, and clearly demonstrate the presence of an α-effect for the microsolvated α-nucleophile. The highly exothermic reactions with methyl bromide result in a smaller Brønsted βnuc value than observed for methyl chloride, and the α-effect in turn influences the reactions with methyl chloride more than with methyl bromide. Computational investigations reveal that reactions with methyl bromide proceed through earlier transition states with less advanced bond formation compared to the related reactions of methyl chloride. In addition, solvent interactions for HOO(-) are quite different from those with the normal nucleophiles at the transition state, indicating that differential solvation may well contribute to the α-effect. The greater thermodynamic and kinetic stability of the anion-methanol clusters relative to the anion-water clusters accounts well for the differences in the influence of solvation with the two protic polar solvents.

Entities:  

Year:  2013        PMID: 24117206     DOI: 10.1021/jp407698a

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


  3 in total

1.  Gas-phase alkyl and N-alkylamino cation affinities of anionic alpha-oxygen nucleophiles (H n XO-; X = N, P, As, O, S, Se, F, Cl, Br; n = 0-2): a theoretical G2(+)M study.

Authors:  Song Geng; Yun-Yun Liu; Ying Xue
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2017-12-05       Impact factor: 1.810

2.  Microsolvation effects on the reactivity of oxy-nucleophiles: the case of gas-phase SN2 reactions of YO-(CH3OH) n=1,2 towards CH3Cl.

Authors:  Liu Yun-Yun; Qiu Fang-Zhou; Zhu Jun; Ren Yi; Lau Kai-Chung
Journal:  J Mol Model       Date:  2017-05-20       Impact factor: 1.810

3.  The α-effect and competing mechanisms: the gas-phase reactions of microsolvated anions with methyl formate.

Authors:  Ditte L Thomsen; Charles M Nichols; Jennifer N Reece; Steen Hammerum; Veronica M Bierbaum
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2013-12-18       Impact factor: 3.109

  3 in total

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