Nucleophilic Displacement in Polyhalogenoaromatic Compounds. XIII. Polyfluoroarene Systems

1987 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 241 ◽  
Author(s):  
RK Atwal ◽  
R Bolton

Rate coefficients are reported for the methoxydefluorination of decafluoro-biphenyl and -phen-anthrene, of octafluoro-biphenylene, -naphthalene, -acenaphthylene, and -toluene, of 4H- heptafluorotoluene and the 4-bromo and 4-phenyl analogues, and of tetradecafluoro-4,4'- dimethylbiphenyl in methanol at 298 K. These rates are compared with theoretically calculated reactivities; none give perfect correlation. The orientation of nucleophilic attack upon polyfluorinated aromatic systems may be simply understood by considering each aromatic ring to act as a single entity and neglecting the effects of the carbon substituents, so that the orientation of attack of each benzene ring is the same as that of the corresponding polyfluorobenzene.

Molecules ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (12) ◽  
pp. 2950
Author(s):  
Ivaylo V. Dimitrov ◽  
Martyn G. Harvey ◽  
Logan J. Voss ◽  
James W. Sleigh ◽  
Michael J. Bickerdike ◽  
...  

A series of benzene ring substituted ketamine N-alkyl esters were prepared from the corresponding substituted norketamines. Few of the latter have been reported since they have not been generally accessible via known routes. We report a new general route to many of these norketamines via the Neber (oxime to α-aminoketone) rearrangement of readily available substituted 2-phenycyclohexanones. We explored the use of the substituents Cl, Me, OMe, CF3, and OCF3, with a wide range of lipophilic and electronic properties, at all available benzene ring positions. The 2- and 3-substituted compounds were generally more active than 4-substituted compounds. The most generally acceptable substituent was Cl, while the powerful electron-withdrawing substituents CF3 and OCF3 provided fewer effective analogues.


1972 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 811 ◽  
Author(s):  
RI Herrmann ◽  
ID Rae

When one of a pair of substituents ortho to each other on a benzene ring is conjugated with an appropriate para substituent, it is pulled towards coplanarity with the aromatic ring and the other substituent has to take a greater share of the twisting necessary to avert steric conflict. This effect, termed electronic buttressing, is demonstrated in the proton magnetic resonance spectra of 5-dimethylamino-2- nitroanilines, 5-substituted methyl 2-nitrobenzoates, and 4-substituted 1,2-dinitrobenzenes. In this latter group the size of the effect is shown to depend on the conjugative ability of the 4-substituent.


2001 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 157-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vimal K Balakrishnan ◽  
Julian M Dust ◽  
Gary W vanLoon ◽  
Erwin Buncel

The rates of displacement of 3-methyl-4-nitrophenoxide ion from the pesticide, fenitrothion, by alkali metal ethoxides in anhydrous ethanol were followed spectrophotometrically. Through product analysis experiments, which included 31P NMR and GC-MS, as well as spectrophotometric analysis, three reaction pathways were identified: nucleophilic attack at the phosphorus centre, attack at the aliphatic carbon, and a minor SNAr route ([Formula: see text]7%). Furthermore, a consecutive process was found to occur on the product of attack at the phosphorus centre. For purposes of kinetic treatment, the processes at the aliphatic and aromatic carbon were combined (i.e., the minor SNAr pathway was neglected), and the observed reaction rate constants were dissected into rate coefficients for nucleophilic attack at phosphorus and at aliphatic carbon. Attack at phosphorus was found to be catalyzed by the alkali metal ethoxides in the order KOEt > NaOEt > LiOEt. Catalysis arises from alkali metal ethoxide aggregates in the base solutions used (0–1.8 M); treatment of the system as a mixture of free ethoxide, ion-paired metal ethoxide, and metal ethoxide dimers resulted in a good fit with the kinetic data. An unexpected dichotomy in the kinetic behaviour of complexing agents (e.g., DC-18-crown-6, [2.2.2]cryptand) indicated that the dimers are more reactive than free ethoxide anions, which are in turn more reactive than ion-paired metal ethoxide. The observed relative order of reactivity is explained in the context of the Eisenman theory in which the free energy of association of the metal ion with the rate-determining transition state is largely determined by the solvent reorganization parameter. In contrast with displacement at the phosphorus centre, attack at the aliphatic carbon was not found to be catalyzed by alkali metals. In this case, the free ethoxide anion was more reactive than either the ion-paired metal ethoxide or the dimeric aggregate. The differing effects of alkali metals on the two pathways is ascribed largely to the leaving group pKa. For carbon attack, the pKa value estimated for demethyl fenitrothion, 2.15, is sufficiently low that metal ions are not required to stabilize the rate-determining transition state. In contrast, for phosphorus attack, 3-methyl-4-nitrophenoxide, with a pKa of 7.15, requires stabilization by metal ion interactions. Hence, alkali metal ions catalyze attack at phosphorus, but not attack at the carbon centres.Key words: organophosphorothioate, pesticide, fenitrothion, ethanolysis, alkali metal ethoxide, ion-pair reactivity, dimers, catalysis, competitive pathways.


2021 ◽  
Vol 316 ◽  
pp. 75-80
Author(s):  
Oleg Kh. Karimov ◽  
Galina Yu. Kolchina ◽  
Eldar M. Movsumzade

In the framework of method of the B3LYP hybrid density functional and the restricted Hartree-Fock method, quantum-chemical calculations of model compounds of lignin, i.e. derivatives of p-hydroxycinnamic alcohol were carried out. The structures and reactivity of coumaric, coniferyl and synapol alcohols were studied. Quantitative characteristics of the reactivity of these acids are given. It is found that the electronic structure of lignin is determined primarily by the charge distribution in its structural phenylpropane unit. In the molecules of all model compounds of lignin, the center for nucleophilic attack is the carbon of aromatic ring (E-ring) with a hydroxyl group, and in the molecule of synapol alcohol, this center is also the carbon of the aromatic ring (E-ring) with a methoxy group. In all three compounds, a center with an increased electron density appears on the Сβ carbon atom.


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