• Title/Summary/Keyword: Chemical Reaction Mechanism

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The Kinetics and Mechanism for the Oxidation of Nicotinic Acid by Peroxomonosulfate in Acidic Aqueous Medium

  • Agrawal, Anju;Sailani, Riya;Gupta, Beena;Khandelwal, C.L.;Sharma, P.D.
    • Journal of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.56 no.2
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    • pp.212-216
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    • 2012
  • The kinetics of oxidation of nicotinic acid by peroxomonosulfate (PMS) has been studied in acetate buffers. Stoichiometry of the reaction corresponds to the reaction of one mole of the oxidant with a mole of nicotinic acid. N${\rightarrow}$O product has been confirmed both by UV visible and IR spectroscopy. The reaction is second order viz. first order with respect to each reactant. Activation parameters have also been evaluated. A plausible reaction mechanism is mentioned and the derived kinetic rate law accounts for experimental observations.

Baylis-Hillman Reaction and Chemical Transformations of Baylis-Hillman Adducts

  • Lee, Ka-Young;Gowrisankar, Saravanan;Kim, Jae-Nyoung
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.26 no.10
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    • pp.1481-1490
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    • 2005
  • Carbon-carbon single bond-forming reaction is the most useful and fundamental reaction in organic synthesis. Most of the basic carbon-carbon single bond-forming reactions, thus, developed in the past. In these respects, conceptually new C-C bond formation reaction can be highlighted. The Baylis-Hillman reaction was found at the early 1970’s. However, extensive studies on this highly potential reaction were started only before 15 years. This review has been written to shed more lights to the importance of Baylis-Hillman reaction. We have focused mainly on the reaction mechanism, conceptually related reactions, and chemical transformations of the Baylis-Hillman adducts.

Kinetics and Mechanism of $N_2H_4-KBrO_3$ Reaction in the Presence of Allyl Alcohol$^\dag$

  • Choi, Q.-Won;Chung, Keun-Ho
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.7 no.6
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    • pp.462-465
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    • 1986
  • Kinetics and Mechanism of $N_2H_4-KBrO_3$ reaction in the presence of allyl alcohol have been studied. The pseudo-first order rate constant for gas evolution was found to be $10^{-4}{\sim}10^{-2}\;sec^{-1}\;at\;25.0{\pm}0.1^{\circ}C$, increasing with concentration of hydrogen ion. When concentrations of sulfuric acid and allyl alcohol are both sufficiently high, the following overall reaction explains experimental results reasonably well: $N_2H_4\;+\;BrO_3^-\;+\;H^+\;{\to}\;N_2\;+\;HOBr\;+\;2H_2O,\;CH_2\;=\;CHCH_2OH\;+\;HOBr\;{\to}\;CH_2-OHCHBrCH_2OH$. More complicated reaction mechanisms at lower acidity conditions have been contemplated.

Two different reaction mechanisms of cinnamate side groups attached to the various polymer backbones

  • Hah, Hyun-Dae;Sung, Shi-Joon;Cho, Ki-Yun;Jeong, Yong-Cheol;Park, Jung-Ki
    • 한국정보디스플레이학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2006.08a
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    • pp.772-775
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    • 2006
  • Cinnamate polymers are well known photoreactive polymers due to [2+2] cycloaddition reaction of cinnamate side group. In this work, we have found that the cinnamate side groups could be also reacted by thermal energy, and this reaction is presumed to attribute to the radical reaction of carbon double bond in the cinnamate groups. Contrary to the photocycloaddition reaction of the cinnamate side groups, the thermal reaction of cinnamate side group was closely related to the flexibility of polymer backbone. The difference of the mechanism between the photocycloaddition reaction and thermal crosslinking reaction was confirmed by $^1H-NMR$$ and $^{13}C-NMR$ analysis of the model compound.

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Kinetics and Reaction Mechanism for Aminolysis of Benzyl 4-Pyridyl Carbonate in H2O: Effect of Modification of Nucleofuge from 2-Pyridyloxide to 4-Pyridyloxide on Reactivity and Reaction Mechanism

  • Kang, Ji-Sun;Um, Ik-Hwan
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.33 no.7
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    • pp.2269-2273
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    • 2012
  • Pseudo-first-order rate constants $k_{amine}$ have been measured spectrophotometrically for the reactions of benzyl 4-pyridyl carbonate 6 with a series of alicyclic secondary amines in $H_2O$ at $25.0^{\circ}C$. The plots of $k_{amine}$ vs. [amine] curve upward, indicating that the reactions proceed through a stepwise mechanism with two intermediates, a zwitterionic tetrahedral intermediate $T^{\pm}$ and its deprotonated form $T^-$. This contrasts to the report that the corresponding reactions of benzyl 2-pyridyl carbonate 5 proceed through a forced concerted pathway. The $k_{amine}$ values for the reactions of 6 have been dissected into the second-order rate constant $Kk_2$ and the thirdorder rate constant $Kk_3$. The Br${\o}$nsted-type plots are linear with ${\beta}_{nuc}=0.94$ and 1.18 for $Kk_2$ and $Kk_3$, respectively. The $Kk_2$ for the reaction of 6 is smaller than the second-order rate constant $k_N$ for the corresponding reaction of 5, although 4-pyridyloxide in 6 is less basic and a better nucleofuge than 2-pyridyloxide in 5.

Kinetic Study on Aminolysis of Phenyl 2-Pyridyl Carbonate in Acetonitrile: Effect of Intramolecular H-bonding Interaction on Reactivity and Reaction Mechanism

  • Song, Ji-Hyun;Lee, Jae-In;Um, Ik-Hwan
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.35 no.7
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    • pp.2081-2085
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    • 2014
  • Second-order rate constants ($k_N$) have been measured spectrophotometrically for the reactions of phenyl 2- pyridyl carbonate (6) with a series of cyclic secondary amines in MeCN at $25.0{\pm}0.1^{\circ}C$. The Br${\o}$nsted-type plot for the reaction of 6 is linear with ${\beta}_{nuc}$ = 0.54, which is typical for reactions reported previously to proceed through a concerted mechanism. Substrate 6 is over $10^3$ times more reactive than 2-pyridyl benzoate (5), although the reactions of 6 and 5 proceed through the same mechanism. A combination of steric hindrance, inductive effect and resonance contribution is responsible for the kinetic results. The reactions of 6 and 5 proceed through a cyclic transition state (TS) in which H-bonding interactions increase the nucleofugality of the leaving group (i.e., 2-pyridiniumoxide). The enhanced nucleofugality forces the reactions of 6 and 5 to proceed through a concerted mechanism. In contrast, the corresponding reaction of 4-nitrophenyl 2-pyridyl carbonate (7) proceeds through a stepwise mechanism with quantitative liberation of 4-nitrophenoxide ion as the leaving group, indicating that replacement of the 4-nitrophenoxy group in 7 by the PhO group in 6 changes the reaction mechanism (i.e., from a stepwise mechanism to a concerted pathway) as well as the leaving group (i.e., from 4-nitrophenoxide to 2-pyridiniumoxide). The strong electron-withdrawing ability of the 4-nitrophenoxy group in 7 inhibits formation of a H-bonded cyclic TS. The presence or absence of a H-bonded cyclic TS governs the reaction mechanism (i.e., a concerted or stepwise mechanism) as well as the leaving group (i.e., 2-pyridiniumoxide or 4-nitrophenoxide).

Mechanistic Study of Half-titanocene-based Reductive Pinacol Coupling Reaction

  • Kim, Young-Jo;Do, Young-Kyu;Park, Sung-Jin
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.32 no.11
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    • pp.3973-3978
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    • 2011
  • The reductive pinacol coupling reaction of aldehydes or ketones creating a new C-C bond has been a major tool to produce 1,2-diol compounds. The reaction mechanism is known to be composed of sequential three steps (activation, coupling, and dissociation). In this work, we studied the dissociation step of half-titanocene-based catalytic systems. Cp and $Cp^*$ derivatives of the pinacolato-bridged dinuclear complex were synthesized and evaluated as possible models for intermediates from the coupling step. We monitored $^1H$-NMR spectra of the reaction between the metalla-pinacol intermediates and $D_2O$. New reaction routes of the dissociation step including oxo- and pinacolato-dibridged dinuclear complexes and oxo-bridged multinuclear complexes have been suggested.

Adsorption Reactions of Trimethylgallium and Arsine on H/Si(100)-2x1 Surface

  • Cho, Ji-Eun;Ghosh, Manik Kumer;Choi, Cheol-Ho
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.30 no.8
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    • pp.1805-1810
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    • 2009
  • The adsorptions of trimethygallium (TMG) and arsine (As$H_3$) on H/Si(100)-2x1 surface were theoretically investigated. In the case of TMG adsorption, methane loss reaction, surface methylation, hydrogen loss reaction and ring closing reaction channels were found. The mechanism of As$H_3$ adsorption on the surface was also identified. Among these, the methane loss reaction depositing –Ga(C$H_3)_2$ was found to be the major channel due to its low barrier height and the large exothermicity. The surface methylation reaction is the second most favorable channel. In contrast, arsine turned out to be less reactive on the surface, implying that Arsine surface reaction would be the rate limiting step in the overall ALD process.

Mechanism for the Reaction of Substututed Phenacyl Arenesulfonates with Substituted Pyridines under High Pressures

  • 박헌영;손기주;정덕영;여수동
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.18 no.11
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    • pp.1179-1182
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    • 1997
  • The rates for the reaction of (Z)-phenacyl (X)-benzenesulfonates with (Y)-pyridines in acetone were measured by an electrical conductivity method at 1-2000 bars and 45 ℃. The magnitudes of the Hammett reaction constants, ρX, ρY and ρZ, represent the degree of Nu-C bond formation and that of C-L bond breaking. The magnitude of correlation interaction term ρij can be used to determine the structure of the transition state (TS) for the SN reaction. As the pressure is increased, the Hammett reaction constants, ρX, |ρY| and ρZ are increased, but correlation interaction coefficient, |ρXZ| and ρYZ, are decreased. The results indicate that the reaction of (Z)-phenacyl (X)-benzenesulfonates with (Y)-pyridines probably moves from an associative SN2 to late-type SN2 mechanism by increasing pressure.

Transition-State Structures for Solvolysis of Methanesulfonyl Chloride

  • 양기열;강금덕;구인선;이익준
    • Bulletin of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.18 no.11
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    • pp.1186-1191
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    • 1997
  • Solvolyses of methanesulfonyl chloride (CH3SO2Cl) in water and methanol have been studied theoretically using ab initio self-consistent reaction field (SCRF) molecular orbital method. All stationary structures including transition state on the potential energy surface in solution have been found and compared with the gas phase structures. The overall reaction occurs via a concerted SN2 mechanism with a non-cyclic trigonal bipyramidal transition state, and the activation barrier is lowered significantly in solution. The transition state for the hydrolysis reaction is looser than that for the methanolysis reaction, and this is in accord with the experimental findings that an SN2 type mechanism, which is shifted toward an SN1 process or an SAN process in the hydrolysis and alcoholysis reaction, respectively, takes place. The catalytic role of additional solvent molecules appears to be a purely general-base catalysis based on the linear transition structures. Experimental barrier can be estimated by taking into account the desolvation energy of nucleophile in the reaction of methanesulfonyl chloride with bulk solvent cluster as a nucleophile.