Abstract

The ability of differently substituted charged phenyl radicals (a class of distonic radical cations) to abstract an iodine atom from allyl iodide was systematically examined in the gas phase by using Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry. The reaction products and second-order reaction rate constants were determined for several radicals that differ by the type and/or number of substituents located in the ortho- and/or meta-position with respect to the radical site. All the radicals also carry a para-pyridinium group needed for mass spectrometric manipulation. These electron-deficient phenyl radicals react with allyl iodide by predominant iodine atom abstraction. The reaction is facilitated by the presence of neutral electron-withdrawing substituents, such as F, CF3, Cl, or CN. The extent of rate increase depends on the type and number of the substituents, as well as their location relative to the radical site. Based on molecular orbital calculations (PM3 and Becke3LYP/6-31G(d)+ZPVE), the indicated variations in the transition state energy are not related to enthalpic factors. Instead, the results are rationalized by polar effects arising from a variable contribution of a stabilizing charge transfer resonance structure to the transition state. A semiquantitative measure for the barrier-lowering effect of each substituent is provided by its influence on the electron affinity of the radical (the electron affinities were calculated by Becke3LYP/ 6-31+G(d) and AM1, which were found to produce similar values). Methyl substitution does not significantly affect the electron affinity, and accordingly, does not have a detectable effect on reactivity. Methyl groups located at ortho-positions are an exception, however. o-Methyl-substituted phenyl radicals undergo exothermic rearrangement to a benzyl radical in competition with iodine abstraction from allyl iodide.

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