Transition State for β-Hydride Elimination in Alkyl Groups on Pt(111)

2006 ◽  
Vol 110 (19) ◽  
pp. 9660-9666 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pingping Ye ◽  
Andrew J. Gellman
1963 ◽  
Vol 41 (11) ◽  
pp. 2800-2806 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Howard ◽  
K. U. Ingold

The relative rates of reaction of a large number of ortho-alkyl phenols with styrylperoxy radicals have been measured at 65 °C. These groups have both an accelerating effect owing to their electron-donating character and a retarding effect which arises from steric factors. With two ortho-alkyl groups both the reaction rate and the overall polar contribution to the transition state decrease as the size of the alkyl groups is increased. A single o-t-butyl group produces a small enhancement of the reaction rate over and above its polar effect but this is not observed with any other alkyl groups.


1996 ◽  
Vol 74 (4) ◽  
pp. 544-558 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dennis Suh ◽  
David L. Pole ◽  
John Warkentin ◽  
Johan K. Terlouw

Methoxy-(2,2,2-trifluoroethoxy)carbene radical cations, CH3O-C-OCH2CF3•+, 1•+, are cleanly generated by the dissociative electron ionization (EI) of 2-methoxy-5,5-dimethyl-2-(2,2,2-trifluoroethoxy)-Δ3-1,3,4-oxadiazoline I. Neutralization–reionization (NR) mass spectrometry of the neutral carbene 1, generated by one-electron reduction of 1•+, shows no recovery ion signal and thus 1 is not a viable species within the μs time scale of the experiment. Very low vapour pressure (VLVP) pyrolysis – mass spectrometry of I in conjunction with (multiple) collision experiments shows that 1 completely isomerizes, via a 1,2-trifluoroethyl shift, into methyl 3,3,3-trifluoropropionate, CF3CH2C(=O)OCH3, 1a. This technique was also used to study the related dialkoxycarbenes C2H5O-C-OCH2CF3, 2, CH3O-C-OC2H5, 3, and CH3O-C-OCH(CH3)2, 4, generated from the corresponding 2,2-dialkoxy-5,5-dimethyl-Δ3-1,3,4-oxadiazolines. The pyrolytically generated carbene 2 behaves analogously to 1 and completely isomerizes to ethyl 3,3,3-trifluoropropionate, 2a. The neutral carbenes 3 and 4 undergo only a partial isomerization via 1,2-alkyl shifts in which the ethyl and isopropyl groups show a slightly greater migratory aptitude, respectively, than the methyl group. The differences in migratory aptitude are explained in terms of a transition state model similar to that of a 1,2-H shift in carbenes, with development of negative charge in the migrating group. The greater migratory aptitude of CF3CH2, as compared to CH3 and CH3CH2, is attributed to the stabilization of negative charge in the transition state by strongly electron-withdrawing β-fluorines whereas the differences in migratory aptitude between the alkyl groups in 3 and 4 are largely due to the greater polarizability of isopropyl and ethyl groups, as compared to the methyl group. Key words: dialkoxycarbenes, pyrolysis, tandem mass spectrometry.


1991 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 138-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annette D. Allen ◽  
Lynn M. Baigrie ◽  
Leyi Gong ◽  
Thomas T. Tidwell

Phenylcyclopropylketene (4), tert-butylcyclopropylketene (5), and dicyclopropylketene (6) were formed by dehydrochlorination of the corresponding acyl chlorides by Et3N in THF, and are the first cyclopropylketenes to be isolated and purified. Reaction of 4 with n-BuLi and capture of the intermediate enolates with Me3SiCl gave the stereoisomeric silyl enol ethers c-PrCPh=C(OSiMe3)-n-Bu with a 79:21 preference for formation of the Z isomer resulting from nucleophilic attack syn to cyclopropyl, whereas the corresponding reaction of t-BuLi gave a 9:91 preference for attack anti to cyclopropyl. Some isopropyl-, cyclopentyl-, and cyclohexylketenes gave comparable results. Analyses of the relative sizes of the ketene substituents in the ground state by steric parameters, and of the product stabilities by molecular mechanics, both fail to predict the observed similarities in the results with different secondary alkyl groups. The hydration reactivities of 4 and 6 show that, in neutral H2O/CH3CN, c-PrCPh=C=O is more reactive than i-PrCPh=C=O, a result ascribed as mainly due to the smaller size of cyclopropyl. c-Pr2C=C=O has the same reactivity in neutral water as Et2C=C=O, but is 22 times less reactive with acid, a result attributed to the inability of the β-cyclopropyl groups to directly stabilize the cationic transition state for protonation. Key words: cyclopropylketenes, ketenes, nucleophilic addition, hydration kinetics.


1965 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 1389-1397 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald E. McGreer ◽  
Robert S. McDaniel ◽  
Magnus G. Vinje

A number of 4,4-dialkyl-3-cyano-3-carbomethoxy-Δ1-pyrazolines have been synthesized. Pyrolysis of these pyrazolines yielded cyclopropane and olefin products. The formation of olefin products by rearrangement of an alkyl group from C4 to C5 of the pyrazoline system suggests that positive charge is developed on C5 in the transition state. Ionic character in the transition state was also indicated by the fact that the rate of pyrolysis is faster in polar than in nonpolar solvents.


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