TY - JOUR
T1 - Hydrogen Abstraction by Alkoxyl Radicals
T2 - Computational Studies of Thermodynamic and Polarity Effects on Reactivities and Selectivities
AU - Liu, Fengjiao
AU - Ma, Siqi
AU - Lu, Zeying
AU - Nangia, Anjanay
AU - Duan, Meng
AU - Yu, Yanmin
AU - Xu, Guochao
AU - Mei, Ye
AU - Bietti, Massimo
AU - Houk, K. N.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2022/4/20
Y1 - 2022/4/20
N2 - Density functional theory calculations (ωB97X-D) are reported for the reactions of methoxy, tert-butoxy, trichloroethoxy, and trifluoroethoxy radicals with a series of 26 C-H bonds in different environments characteristic of a variety of hydrocarbons and substituted derivatives. The variations in activation barriers are analyzed with modified Evans-Polanyi treatments to account for polarity and unsaturation effects. The treatments by Roberts and Steel and by Mayer have inspired the development of a simple treatment involving the thermodynamics of reactions, the difference between the reactant radical and product radical electronegativities, and the absence or presence of α-unsaturation. The three-parameter equation (ΔH⧧ = 0.52ΔHrxn(1 - d) - 0.35ΔχAB2 + 10.0, where d = 0.44 when there is α-unsaturation to the reacting C-H bond), correlates well with quantum mechanically computed barriers and shows the quantitative importance of the thermodynamics of reactions (dictated by the reactant and the product bond dissociation energies) and polar effects.
AB - Density functional theory calculations (ωB97X-D) are reported for the reactions of methoxy, tert-butoxy, trichloroethoxy, and trifluoroethoxy radicals with a series of 26 C-H bonds in different environments characteristic of a variety of hydrocarbons and substituted derivatives. The variations in activation barriers are analyzed with modified Evans-Polanyi treatments to account for polarity and unsaturation effects. The treatments by Roberts and Steel and by Mayer have inspired the development of a simple treatment involving the thermodynamics of reactions, the difference between the reactant radical and product radical electronegativities, and the absence or presence of α-unsaturation. The three-parameter equation (ΔH⧧ = 0.52ΔHrxn(1 - d) - 0.35ΔχAB2 + 10.0, where d = 0.44 when there is α-unsaturation to the reacting C-H bond), correlates well with quantum mechanically computed barriers and shows the quantitative importance of the thermodynamics of reactions (dictated by the reactant and the product bond dissociation energies) and polar effects.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85128239241
U2 - 10.1021/jacs.2c00389
DO - 10.1021/jacs.2c00389
M3 - 文章
C2 - 35378978
AN - SCOPUS:85128239241
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 144
SP - 6802
EP - 6812
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 15
ER -