Abstract

In this work, we explore the effect of solvent on 13C and 81Br kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) during elimination of bromine substituent from brominated organic compounds promoted by hydroxyl anion. In the present study, we investigate HBr elimination from 2-bromoethylbenzene in three different polar media (water, ethanol, and acetonitrile) as well as bromide ion elimination from 1,2-dibromoethane upon nucleophilic substitution by the hydroxyl ion in aqueous solution using carbon and bromine isotope analysis as mechanistic tools. We reconsider the hypothesis that the magnitude of leaving group halide KIE should visibly depend on the solvent and bond-breaking in a protic solvent should be accompanied by hydrogen bonding which would result in less zero-point energy loss than in an aprotic solvent. Modeling the elimination reaction using the available popular theoretical methods along with different approaches for including environment effects we demonstrate in the presented study no interpretable effect of the solvent on the transition state structure and hence on the theoretically predicted KIEs. The comparison of the magnitudes of carbon and bromine kinetic isotope effects for two different mechanistic pathways (elimination vs substitution) is also discussed.

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