Abstract
The reaction between p-benzoquinone and H2O2 in slightly alkaline solutions yields three major quinoid products that accumulate in the reaction mixture: (a) 2,3-epoxy-p-benzoquinone, (b) 2-hydroxy-p-benzoquinone and (c) p-benzohydroquinone. The reaction is accompanied by photoemission, probably originating from excited triplet 2-hydroxy-p-benzoquinone. These products originate from hydrogen peroxide and hydroxide nucleophilic addition to the C2 = C3 double bond, as well as secondary redox interactions. The hydroxy substituent and the epoxide ring exert a substantial influence on the electronic distribution in the p-benzoquinone molecule leading to a decrease in the half-wave potential, as compared to the parent p-benzoquinone. The generation of electronically excited states is the result of reactions secondary to the nucleophilic additions involving 2-hydroxy-p-benzosemiquinone, H2O2 and hydroxyl radical. The process involves the primary oxidation of 2-hydroxy-p-benzosemiquinone by hydrogen peroxide, followed by oxidation of the semiquinone by hydroxyl radical leading to the formation of the electronically excited quinone. The decay of the excited triplet to the ground state is accompanied by photoemission with maximal intensity at 485-530 nm. Thermodynamic calculations along with an observed increase of photoemission intensity in anaerobiosis point to the triplet (n, pi*) multiplicity of the excited state. The efficiency of chemiluminescence could be calculated as 10(-8) photons/2-hydroxy-p-benzoquinone molecule formed. Photoemission arising from the p-benzoquinone/H2O2 reaction was inhibited efficiently by addition of GSH to the reaction mixture. This may be due to deactivation of the triplet quinone by a 2-glutathionyl-p-benzohydroquinone adduct, involving thioether alpha-hydrogen atom-transfer to the triplet ketone.
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