Abstract

Low dielectric constant apolar aprotic solvents, although employed on a limited scale for studying proton transfer reactions as compared with commonly used polar protic or dipolar aprotic ones, offer some particular advantages, namely, specific solute–solvent interactions are virtually eliminated and proton transfer occurs directly in an apolar aprotic solvent. An intriguing feature of these reactions is their general acid‐catalyzed/base‐catalyzed kinetics with a time scale over microseconds to minutes. In fact, the true or intrinsic relative strengths of acids/bases when measured in such solvents come to the fore much more clearly than those obtained in other classes of solvents. Recently, a review documenting the post‐1980 developments relating to proton transfer reactions in apolar aprotic solvents has been published. The present article is a commentary of the pre‐1980 developments in this area since the 1920s Brønsted–Lowry's “proton cult” of acid–base theory. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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