Why Are sec-Alkylperoxyl Bimolecular Self-Reactions Orders of Magnitude Faster than the Analogous Reactions of tert-Alkylperoxyls? The Unanticipated Role of CH Hydrogen Bond Donation

Abstract:

High-level ab initio calculations are used to identify the mechanism of secondary (and primary) alkylperoxyl radical termination and explain why their reactions are much faster than their tertiary counterparts. Contrary to existing literature, the decomposition of both tertiary and non-tertiary tetroxides follows the same asymmetric two-step bond cleavage pathway to form a caged intermediate of overall singlet multiplicity comprising triplet oxygen and two alkoxyl radicals. The alpha hydrogen atoms of non-tertiary species facilitate this process by forming unexpected CH⋯O hydrogen bonds to the evolving O2. For non-tertiary peroxyls, subsequent alpha hydrogen atom transfer then yields the experimentally observed non-radical products, ketone, alcohol and O2, whereas for tertiary species, this reaction is precluded and cage escape of the (unpaired) alkoxyl radicals is a likely outcome with important consequences for autoxidation.

SEEK ID: https://publications.h-its.org/publications/505

DOI: 10.1039/C6CP04670C

Research Groups: Computational Carbon Chemistry

Publication type: Journal

Journal: Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

Citation: Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 18(34):23673-23679

Date Published: 2016

Registered Mode: by DOI

Authors: Richmond Lee, Ganna Gryn'ova, K. U. Ingold, Michelle L. Coote

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Citation
Lee, R., Gryn'ova, G., Ingold, K. U., & Coote, M. L. (2016). Why are sec-alkylperoxyl bimolecular self-reactions orders of magnitude faster than the analogous reactions of tert-alkylperoxyls? The unanticipated role of CH hydrogen bond donation. In Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics (Vol. 18, Issue 34, pp. 23673–23679). Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC). https://doi.org/10.1039/c6cp04670c
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Created: 5th Nov 2019 at 13:58

Last updated: 5th Mar 2024 at 21:23

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