The aminoxyl radical (>N-O¥) BTNO (benzotriazole-N-oxyl) has been generated by the oxidation of 1-hydroxybenzotriazole (HBT; >N-OH) with a CeIV salt in MeCN. BTNO presents a broad absorption band with ìmax 474 nm and 1840 M-1 cm-1, and spontaneously decays with a firstorder rate constant of 6.3 10-3 s-1 in MeCN at 25 °C. Characterization of BTNO radical by EPR, laser flash photolysis, and cyclic voltammetry is provided. The spontaneous decay of BTNO is strongly accelerated in the presence of H-donor substrates such as alkylarenes, benzyl and allyl alcohols, and alkanols, and rate constants of H-abstraction by BTNO from a number of substrates have been spectroscopically investigated at 25 °C. The kinetic isotope effect confirms the H-abstraction step as rate-determining. Activation parameters have been measured in the 15-40 °C range with selected substrates. A correlation between Ea and BDE(C-H) (C-H bond dissociation energy) for a small series of H-donors has been obtained according to the Evans-Polanyi equation, giving R ) 0.44. From this plot, the experimentally unavailable BDE(C-H) of benzyl alcohol can be extrapolated, as ca. 79 kcal/mol. With respect to the H-abstraction step, peculiar differences in the ¢Sq parameter emerge between an alkylarene, ArC(H)R2, and a benzyl alcohol, ArC(H)(OH)R. The data acquired on the H-abstraction reactivity of BTNO are compared with those recently reported for the aminoxyl radical PINO (phthalimide-N-oxyl), generated from N-hydroxyphthalimide (HPI). The higher reactivity of radical PINO is explained on the basis of the higher energy of the NO-H bond of HPI, as compared with that of HBT (88 vs ca. 85 kcal/mol, respectively), which is formed on H-abstraction from the RH substrate.

Kinetic study of the hydrogen abstraction reaction by the benzotriazole-N-oxyl radical (BTNO) from H-donor substrates / P., Brandi; Galli, Carlo; Gentili, Patrizia. - In: JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0022-3263. - 70:(2005), pp. 9521-9528. [10.1021/jo051615n]

Kinetic study of the hydrogen abstraction reaction by the benzotriazole-N-oxyl radical (BTNO) from H-donor substrates

GALLI, Carlo;GENTILI, Patrizia
2005

Abstract

The aminoxyl radical (>N-O¥) BTNO (benzotriazole-N-oxyl) has been generated by the oxidation of 1-hydroxybenzotriazole (HBT; >N-OH) with a CeIV salt in MeCN. BTNO presents a broad absorption band with ìmax 474 nm and 1840 M-1 cm-1, and spontaneously decays with a firstorder rate constant of 6.3 10-3 s-1 in MeCN at 25 °C. Characterization of BTNO radical by EPR, laser flash photolysis, and cyclic voltammetry is provided. The spontaneous decay of BTNO is strongly accelerated in the presence of H-donor substrates such as alkylarenes, benzyl and allyl alcohols, and alkanols, and rate constants of H-abstraction by BTNO from a number of substrates have been spectroscopically investigated at 25 °C. The kinetic isotope effect confirms the H-abstraction step as rate-determining. Activation parameters have been measured in the 15-40 °C range with selected substrates. A correlation between Ea and BDE(C-H) (C-H bond dissociation energy) for a small series of H-donors has been obtained according to the Evans-Polanyi equation, giving R ) 0.44. From this plot, the experimentally unavailable BDE(C-H) of benzyl alcohol can be extrapolated, as ca. 79 kcal/mol. With respect to the H-abstraction step, peculiar differences in the ¢Sq parameter emerge between an alkylarene, ArC(H)R2, and a benzyl alcohol, ArC(H)(OH)R. The data acquired on the H-abstraction reactivity of BTNO are compared with those recently reported for the aminoxyl radical PINO (phthalimide-N-oxyl), generated from N-hydroxyphthalimide (HPI). The higher reactivity of radical PINO is explained on the basis of the higher energy of the NO-H bond of HPI, as compared with that of HBT (88 vs ca. 85 kcal/mol, respectively), which is formed on H-abstraction from the RH substrate.
2005
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Kinetic study of the hydrogen abstraction reaction by the benzotriazole-N-oxyl radical (BTNO) from H-donor substrates / P., Brandi; Galli, Carlo; Gentili, Patrizia. - In: JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0022-3263. - 70:(2005), pp. 9521-9528. [10.1021/jo051615n]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/240765
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