New Insights into the Mechanism of Amine/Nitroxide Cycling during the Hindered Amine Light Stabilizer Inhibited Oxidative Degradation of Polymers

Abstract:

High-level ab initio molecular orbital theory calculations are used to identify the origin of the remarkably high inhibition stoichiometric factors exhibited by dialkylamine-based radical-trapping antioxidants. We have calculated the free energy barriers and reaction energies at 25, 80, and 260 °C in the gas phase and in aqueous solution for a broad range of reactions that might, potentially, be involved in amine/nitroxide cycling, as well as several novel pathways proposed as part of the present work, including that of N-alkyl hindered amine light stabilizer activation. We find that most of the literature nitroxide regeneration cycles should be discarded on either kinetic or thermodynamic grounds; some are even inconsistent with existing experimental observations. We therefore propose a new mechanistic cycle that relies on abstraction of a β-hydrogen atom from an alkoxyamine (R1R2NOCHR3R4). Our results suggest that this cycle is energetically feasible for a range of substrates and provides an explanation for previously misinterpreted or unexplained experimental results. We also explore alternative mechanisms for amine/nitroxide cycling for cases where the alkoxyamines do not possess an abstractable β-hydrogen.

SEEK ID: https://publications.h-its.org/publications/518

DOI: 10.1021/ja3006379

Research Groups: Computational Carbon Chemistry

Publication type: Journal

Journal: Journal of the American Chemical Society

Citation: J. Am. Chem. Soc. 134(31):12979-12988

Date Published: 24th Jul 2012

Registered Mode: by DOI

Authors: Ganna Gryn’ova, K. U. Ingold, Michelle L. Coote

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Citation
Gryn’ova, G., Ingold, K. U., & Coote, M. L. (2012). New Insights into the Mechanism of Amine/Nitroxide Cycling during the Hindered Amine Light Stabilizer Inhibited Oxidative Degradation of Polymers. In Journal of the American Chemical Society (Vol. 134, Issue 31, pp. 12979–12988). American Chemical Society (ACS). https://doi.org/10.1021/ja3006379
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Created: 5th Nov 2019 at 14:34

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