RESUMEN
The Excited State Intramolecular Proton Transfer (ESIPT) phenomenon involving photo-induced keto-enol tautomerization is known to cause significant variations in the excited state structures and photophysical properties of certain molecules. Here, the dual emission exhibited by 3,6-dihydroxybenzene-1,2,4,5-tetracarboxylic acid tetraethyl ester has been studied both experimentally and theoretically and it is concluded that the second emission is due to ESIPT in polar protic solvents, while it is due to dianion formation in solvents like DMSO and DMF.
RESUMEN
Various disparate experimental results are explained by the hypothesis that reactions of anionic nucleophiles with allylic halides are generally S(N)2. The S(N)2' reactions that do occur proceed generally with anti stereochemistry. Reactions with ion pair nucleophiles occur preferentially as S(N)2' reactions with syn stereochemistry. This hypothesis is consistent with a variety of computations at the HF, B3LYP, mPW1PW91 and MP2 levels with the 6-31+G(d) basis set of reactions of Li and Na fluoride and chloride with allyl halides and 4-halo-2-pentenes. Solvation is considered by a combination of coordination of dimethyl ether to the lithium and sodium cations and "dielectric solvation" with a polarized continuum model.
RESUMEN
The performance of two computational models was evaluated in describing some aggregated structures, the bond lengths and dimerization energies of cesium halides, aquation energies of the cesium cation, and protonation energies of a range of organocesium compounds. One model used the Hay-Wadt (HW) effective core potential (ECP) and a double-ζ valence basis set on Cs; the other used the Ross ECP with two polarization functions on Cs. In both models, the standard 6-31+G** basis was used for the other atoms. At the Hartree-Fock (HF) level, the Ross ECP was found to give geometries and energies in good agreement with experimental results. Second-order Møller-Plesset calculations with this model gave only modestly improved results compared to HF; the B3LYP level gave variable results with unsatisfactory energies. Although the HW model is generally less satisfactory, it often shows comparable trends to those of the Ross model.
RESUMEN
An ab initio study of ionic and ion pair displacement reactions involving allylic systems has been carried out at the RHF/6-31+G* level. The geometries and natural charges show the absence of conjugative stabilization in the ionic transition states, thus differing from traditional explanations. The high reactivity of allyl halides is explained by electrostatic polarization of the double bond. Substituent effects were also studied; in general, electron-withdrawing groups lower the barriers of the ionic S(N)2 reactions but increase the barriers of the ion pair reactions. The allylic reactions are compared with related benzylic systems. Hammett correlations give rho of opposite sign for the ionic and ion pair displacement reactions, in agreement with some experimental results.
RESUMEN
[structure: see text] The sterically bulky tert-butyl group occupies an apical position in trigonal bipyramidal phosphorus in the compound [CH2(6-t-Bu-4-Me-C6H2O)2]P(t-Bu)(1,2-O2C6Cl4) in contrast to the occupation of an equatorial position by the small methyl group in [CH2(6-t-Bu-4-Me-C6H2O)2]P(Me)(1,2-O2C6Cl4); this observation contradicts the familiar "apicophilicity rules" for trigonal bipyramidal phosphorus. Low-temperature solution 31P NMR spectra of [CH2(6-t-Bu-4-Me-C6H2O)2]P(R)(1,2-O2C6Cl4) (R = Me, Et, and n-Bu) show the presence of more than two isomers.