Abstract

The oxidations of aspirin and salicylic acid by enneamolybdomanganate(IV) were studied in perchloric acid medium. The aspirin undergo hydrolysis prior to the oxidation to generate salicylic acid, which was found to be catalyzed by both HClO4 as well as the oxidant. The rate of hydrolysis of aspirin catalyzed by the oxidant was found to be lesser than that of HClO4. A mechanism based on the kinetic results is proposed for oxidation of both aspirin and salicylic acid. Initially, aspirin undergo hydrolysis to give salicylic acid, which is catalyzed by both the oxidant, which also acts as an acid catalyst and the HClO4 used. The salicylic acid generated in prior hydrolysis reacts with an oxidant undergoing oxidative decarboxylation by enneamolybdomanganate(IV) in a rate determining step generating phenol. Further oxidation of phenol by another oxidant molecule gives the final product p-benzoquinone in a fast step. The mechanism of oxidation of salicylic acid was also studied under identical conditions as that of aspirin and found to be similar except its prior hydrolysis. A plausible mechanism was proposed and the rate laws for both the substrates were derived. In order to understand the intervention of free radicals the reaction was studied in presence of added acrylonitrile. The formation of copious precipitate due to polymerization of added acrylonitrile was not observed and the values of kobs also remain constant in presence of added acrylonitrile. The formation of MnIII was also studied in presence of added tetrasodium pyrophosphate, which did not affect the values of kobs. Therefore, the formation of free radical and MnIII was excluded while proposing mechanisms for both the substrates. The effect of added products Mn2+ and molybdate also did not have any effects indicating no prior equilibria involving these two products. The effect of ionic strength and solvent polarity are in favour of the reaction between two neutral molecules. The activation parameters were determined and support an outer sphere reaction with formation of a weak precursor complex between the reactants was proposed for both aspirin and salicylic acid.

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