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1.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(35): 23477-23490, 2023 Sep 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37646145

RESUMO

The electronic structure of a transition metal atom allows it to act as a catalytic active site by providing lower energy alternative pathways in chemical transformations. We have identified and kinetically characterized three such pathways in the title reaction. One is an adiabatic pathway that occurs on a single potential energy surface described within the Born-Oppenheimer approximation. A second pathway opens microseconds into the reaction as a portion of the reacting population competitively transitions from triplet to singlet multiplicity to circumvent energetic barriers on the triplet surface. These pathways are single- and two-state reactive (SSR and TSR) where the Co+ cation mediates an oxidative addition/reductive elimination sequence of the CH3CHO molecule. The third observed reaction pathway is the aldehyde hydrogen tunneling through an Eyring barrier to form high-spin products. First-order rate constants for the adiabatic and nonadiabatic energy lowered pathways, and the hydrogen tunneling pathway, are each measured using the single photon initiated dissociative rearrangement reaction (SPIDRR) experimental technique. We believe that this is the first experimental study where such disparate dynamic features (SSR, TSR, and H-tunneling) are disentangled in a system's chemistry, attributing specific rate constant values to each effect and quantifying the various competitions. Moreover, multi-reference CASSCF/CASPT2 calculations indicate that structures with covalent Co-H bonds are present exclusively along the excited singlet surface. This phenomenon significantly reduces these structures' energy relative to their triplet counterparts, thus enabling the surface crossing and spin inversion that cause the observed two-state reactivity.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(4): 2300-2308, 2022 Jan 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35015007

RESUMO

For several decades, the influence of Two State Reactivity (TSR) has been implicated in a host of reactions, but has lacked a stand-alone, definitive experimental kinetic signature identifying its occurrence. Here, we demonstrate that the measurement of a temporally dependent product branching ratio is indicative of spin inversion and is a kinetic signature of TSR. This is caused by products exiting different hypersurfaces with different rates and relative exothermicities. The composite measurement of product intensities with the same mass but with different multiplicities yield biexponential temporal dependences with the sampled product ratio changing in time. These measurements are made using the single photon initiated dissociative rearrangement reaction (SPIDRR) technique which identifies TSR but further determines the kinetic parameters for reaction along the original ground electronic surface in competition with spin inversion and its consequent TSR.

3.
J Org Chem ; 78(23): 11698-706, 2013 Dec 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24237458

RESUMO

Chiral pyrylium salts are almost unknown in the literature, and none that are epimerizable have been reported prior to our work. Herein, we report two new epimerizable pyryliums and the kinetics of the diastereomeric equilibration of these and one other example. All of these required a careful analysis of the (1)H NMR spectrum to identify the stereoisomers, particularly for one of them. The temporal evolution of the relative isomeric concentrations was determined through acquisition of progressive NMR spectra. The base-catalyzed isomerization kinetics were successfully modeled as sequential, pseudo-first-order reactions that transition through a long-lived intermediate. These results suggest that the pseudobase intermediate is the operative catalyst when epimerizations are initiated with amines with pK(a) 7.4 or greater. Given the bulky nature of the operative acid (pyrylium) and base (pseudobase), the rate of these epimerizations is sensitive to steric bulk in the pyrylium. Thus, the reaction kinetics slow by a factor of 25 when substituents are placed at the ortho versus para position on the pyrylium cyclohexane ring. This is likely due to the difficulty of pseudobase attack at the sterically crowded pyrylium acidic hydrogen position.

4.
J Phys Chem A ; 116(12): 3081-8, 2012 Mar 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22352987

RESUMO

Reaction rate constants have been acquired for the gaseous unimolecular decomposition reaction of the Co(+)(OC(CH(3))(2)) cluster ion and its deuterium labeled analog. Each rate constant is measured at a well resolved cluster internal energy within the range 12,300-16,100 cm(-1). The weighted, averaged kinetic isotope effect (KIE), k(H)/k(D) = 1.54 ± 0.05, is about three times smaller than the KIE measured for the rate-determining rate constants in the similar Ni(+)(OC(CH(3))(2)) decomposition reaction. These reactions likely follow the same oxidative addition-reductive elimination mechanism. Thus, this unexpected change in the KIE magnitudes is not due to differences in the dissociative reaction coordinates. Rather, we propose that the unique dissociation dynamics of these two similar systems is due to differences in the low-lying electronic structure of each transition metal ion.

5.
J Phys Chem A ; 115(10): 1810-20, 2011 Mar 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21338169

RESUMO

The unimolecular decomposition kinetics of the jet-cooled Ni(+)-butanone cluster ion has been monitored over a range of internal energies (16000-18800 cm⁻¹). First-order rate constants are acquired for the precursor ion dissociation into three product channels. The temporal growth of each fragment ion is selectively monitored in a custom instrument and yields similar valued rate constants at a common ion internal energy. The decomposition reaction is proposed to proceed along two parallel reaction coordinates. Each dissociative pathway is rate-limited by the initial Ni(+) oxidative addition into either the C-CH3 or C-C2H5 σ-bond in the butanone molecule. Ratios of integrated product ion intensities as well as the measured rate constants are used to determine values for each σ-bond activation rate constant. The lowest energy measurement presented in this study occurs when the binary complex ion possesses an internal energy of 16000 cm⁻¹. Under this condition, the Ni(+) assisted decomposition of the butanone molecule is rate limited by k(act)(C-C2H5) = (0.92 ± 0.08) × 105 s⁻¹ and k(act)(C-CH3) = (0.37 ± 0.03) × 105 s⁻¹. The relative magnitudes of the two rate constants reflect the greater probability for reaction to occur along the C-C2H5 σ-bond insertion pathway, consistent with thermodynamic arguments. DFT calculations at the B3LYP/6-311++G(d,p) level of theory suggest the most likely geometries and relative energies of the reactants, intermediates, and products.

6.
J Phys Chem A ; 114(4): 1783-9, 2010 Feb 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20050634

RESUMO

Rate constants for the low-energy Ni(+)-assisted dissociative reaction of acetaldehyde have been measured under jet-cooled conditions in the gas phase. The rate constants are acquired through monitoring the time dependence of fragment Ni(+)CO formation. The decomposition of the precursor Ni(+)-acetaldehyde cluster ion proceeds via consecutive, parallel reaction coordinates that originate with the Ni(+)-assisted cleavage of either a C-C or an aldehyde C-H bond. The energies used to initiate these reactions are well below that required to cleave sigma-bonds in the isolated acetaldehyde molecule. Direct measurement of the reaction kinetics over a range of energies indicates that the rate-limiting step in the dissociative mechanism changes at cluster ion internal energies = 17,200 +/- 400 cm(-1). Arguments are presented that this energy marks the closure of the dissociative coordinate that initiates with C-H sigma-bond activation and thus provides a measure of the activation energy of this dissociative pathway.

7.
J Phys Chem A ; 113(51): 14074-80, 2009 Dec 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19877648

RESUMO

Rate constants for the low-energy Ni(+)-assisted C-C bond cleavage reaction of deuterium-labeled acetone have been acquired under jet-cooled conditions in the gas phase. The energies used to initiate the dissociative reactions of the precursor complex ion Ni(+)(d(6)-Ac) are well below that required to cleave C-C sigma-bonds in isolated organic molecules. The rate constants are compared to those acquired previously for the lighter Ni(+)(h(6)-Ac) isotope and result in a substantial kinetic isotope effect (k(H)/k(D) approximately 5.5). Arguments are made that implicate isomerization leading to C-C bond coupling as the rate-limiting step (not C-C sigma-bond activation) in the dissociative reaction.

8.
J Phys Chem A ; 113(39): 10417-24, 2009 Oct 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19725574

RESUMO

The time dependence of the gaseous unimolecular decomposition of the jet-cooled adduct ion, Ni+-OC(CH3)2, was monitored through selective detection of the Ni+CO fragment ion. Various resolved amounts of energy in the range 15600-18800 cm(-1) were supplied to initiate the dissociation reaction through absorption of laser photons by the title molecular complex. First-order rate constants, k(E), ranged from 113000 to 55000 s(-1) and decreased with decreasing amounts of internal excitation. The energy used to initiate the reaction is well below that required to fragment C-C sigma bonds and indicates the necessity of the Ni+ cation to induce bond activation and fragmentation. These measurements are carried out in a unique apparatus and represent the first direct kinetic study of such catalytic type reactions.

9.
Analyst ; 130(2): 233-41, 2005 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15665979

RESUMO

A novel strategy for determining the enantiomeric composition of phenylalanine samples that combines ordinary fluorescence spectroscopy, guest-host cyclodextrin chemistry, and multivariate regression modeling is investigated. Partial-least-squares regression (PLS-1) models were developed from fluorescence spectral data obtained with a series of samples containing cyclodextrin guest-host complexes of phenylalanine with different known enantiomeric compositions. The regression models were subsequently validated by determining the enantiomeric composition of a set of independently prepared phenylalanine samples. The ability of the models to correctly predict the enantiomeric compositions of future samples was evaluated in terms of the root-mean-square percent relative error (RMS%RE). The RMS%RE in the mol fraction of D-phenylalanine ranged from 1.3% to 3.0% when beta-cyclodextrin was used as the host molecule for different guest-host concentrations. The RMS%RE in the mol fraction of D-phenylalanine obtained in a similar validation study conducted with gamma-cyclodextrin ranged between 1.8% and 4.0% for different guest-host concentrations. Compared with previous studies done in absorption, fluorescence data were found to be more sensitive and the spectral differences observed as a function of enantiomeric composition were more uniformly spaced, making regression modeling more reliable. As a result, good regression models could be made at lower concentrations than were possible previously when absorption measurements were used.


Assuntos
Fenilalanina/química , Isomerismo , Modelos Lineares , Espectrometria de Fluorescência
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