Abstract

The click-chemistry capture of volatile aldehydes and ketones by ammonium aminooxy compounds has proven to be an efficient means of analyzing the carbonyl subset in complex mixtures, such as exhaled breath or environmental air. In this work, we examine the carbonyl condensation reaction kinetics of three aminooxy compounds with varying β-ammonium ion substitution using Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR-MS). We determined the activation energies for the reactions of the aminooxy compounds ATM, ADMH and AMAH with a panel of ketones and aldehydes that included acrolein and crotonaldehyde. The measurements indicate that the activation energies for the oximation reactions are quite low, less than 75 kJ mol-1 . ADMH is observed to react the fastest with the carbonyls studied. We postulate this result may be attributed to the ADMH ammonium proton effecting a Brønsted-Lowry acid-catalyzed elimination of water during the rate-determining step of oxime ether formation. A theoretical study of oxime ether formation is presented to explain the enhanced reactivity of ADMH relative to the tetraalkylammonium analog ATM.

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