Abstract

Secondary kinetic isotope effects arise as the result of transition-state zero-point vibrational energy differences. Unimolecular simple cleavage reactions of gas-phase ions in mass spectrometers allow detailed studies of isotope effects on competing reactions, particularly when examined in intramolecular competition experiments where interpretation requires very few simplifying assumptions. The zero-point energy differences reflect changes of isotope sensitive vibrational properties, and both α- and β-secondary deuterium isotope effects are related to the sp 3 → sp 2 hybridization changes that accompany bond cleavage. Deuterium substitution three bonds or more removed from the bond broken also gives rise to isotope effects, but their origin is less easily interpreted. The magnitude and variation of the observed effects depend not only on zero-point energy differences; a number of additional factors play a role. The influence of the critical energy, the excess energy, the size of the reactant, and the presence of competing reactions can be rationalized within a simple, qualitative RRKM framework. The distinction between kinetic and thermodynamic isotope effects is not always obvious.

Full Text
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