Switching Radical Stability by pH-Induced Orbital Conversion

Abstract:

In most radicals the singly occupied molecular orbital (SOMO) is the highest-energy occupied molecular orbital (HOMO); however, in a small number of reported compounds this is not the case. In the present work we expand significantly the scope of this phenomenon, known as SOMO–HOMO energy-level conversion, by showing that it occurs in virtually any distonic radical anion that contains a sufficiently stabilized radical (aminoxyl, peroxyl, aminyl) non-π-conjugated with a negative charge (carboxylate, phosphate, sulfate). Moreover, regular orbital order is restored on protonation of the anionic fragment, and hence the orbital configuration can be switched by pH. Most importantly, our theoretical and experimental results reveal a dramatically higher radical stability and proton acidity of such distonic radical anions. Changing radical stability by 3–4 orders of magnitude using pH-induced orbital conversion opens a variety of attractive industrial applications, including pH-switchable nitroxide-mediated polymerization, and it might be exploited in nature.

SEEK ID: https://publications.h-its.org/publications/516

DOI: 10.1038/nchem.1625

Research Groups: Computational Carbon Chemistry

Publication type: Journal

Journal: Nature Chemistry

Citation: Nature Chem 5(6):474-481

Date Published: 1st Jun 2013

Registered Mode: by DOI

Authors: Ganna Gryn'ova, David L. Marshall, Stephen J. Blanksby, Michelle L. Coote

help Submitter
Citation
Gryn'ova, G., Marshall, D. L., Blanksby, S. J., & Coote, M. L. (2013). Switching radical stability by pH-induced orbital conversion. In Nature Chemistry (Vol. 5, Issue 6, pp. 474–481). Springer Science and Business Media LLC. https://doi.org/10.1038/nchem.1625
Activity

Views: 5866

Created: 5th Nov 2019 at 14:33

Last updated: 5th Mar 2024 at 21:23

help Tags

This item has not yet been tagged.

help Attributions

None

Powered by
(v.1.14.2)
Copyright © 2008 - 2023 The University of Manchester and HITS gGmbH