首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 864 毫秒
1.
The mechanism of the photolysis of formaldehyde was studied in experiments at 3130 Å and in the pressure range of 1–12 torr at 25°C. The experiments were designed to establish the quantum yields of the primary decomposition steps (1) and (2), CH2O + hν → H + HCO (1): CH2O + hν → H2 + CO (2), through the effects of added isobutene, trimethylsilane, and nitric oxide on ΦCO and Φ. The ratio ΦCO/Φ was found to be 1.01 ± 0.09(2σ) and (Φ + ΦCO)/2 = 1.10 ± 0.08 over the range of pressures and a 12-fold change in incident light intensity. Isobutene and nitric oxide additions reduced Φ to about the same limiting value, 0.32 ± 0.03 and 0.34 ± 0.04, respectively, but these added gases differed in their effects on ΦCO. With isobutene addition ΦCO/Φ reached a limiting value of 2.3; with NO addition ΦCO exceeded unity. The addition of small amounts of Me3SiH reduced Φ to 1.02 ± 0.08 and lowered ΦCO to 0.7. These findings were rationalized in terms of a mechanism in which the “nonscavengeable,” molecular hydrogen is formed in reaction (2) with ?2 = 0.32 ± 0.03, while the “free radical” hydrogen is formed in reaction (1) with ?1 = 0.68 ± 0.03. In the pure formaldehyde system these reactions are followed by (3)–(5): H + CH2O → H2 + HCO (3); 2HCO → CH2O + CO (4); 2HCO → H2 + 2CO (5). The data suggest k4/k5 ? 5.8. Isobutene reduced Φ by the reaction H + iso-C4H8 → C4H9 (20), and the results give k20/k3 ? 43 ± 4, in good agreement with the ratio of the reported values of the individual constants k3 and k20.  相似文献   

2.
The photooxidation of formaldehyde in CH2O? O2, oxygen-lean mixtures was studied in the temperature range 298–378 K. H2 and CO formation and the loss of O2 proceed by a chain mechanism, which between 328 and 378 K follows the previously suggested kinetics [1] with one modification. The reaction HO2 + CH2O ? HO2CH2O (5) is now assumed to be reversible and ΔH is estimated to be between 14 and 19 kcal/mol. The relative yields of the chain formed H2 and CO and of the consumed O2 remained constant over the entire temperature range indicating that the relative efficiencies of the HO reactions: HO + CH2O → H2O HCO? (7), HO + CH2O → H2O + HCO (8) and HO + CH2O → HOCH2O (9) are temperature independent.  相似文献   

3.
Published experimental studies concerning the determination of rate constants for the reaction F + H2 → HF + H are reviewed critically and conclusions are presented as to the most accurate results available. Based on these results, the recommended Arrhenius expression for the temperature range 190–376 K is k = (1.1 ± 0.1) × 10−10 exp |-(450 ± 50)/T| cm3 molecule−1 s−1, and the recommended value for the rate constant at 298 K is k = (2.43 ± 0.15) × 10−11 cm3 molecule−1 s−1. The recommended Arrhenius expression for the reaction F + D2 → DF + D, for the same temperature range, based on the recommended expression for k and accurate results for the kinetic isotope effect k/k is k = (1.06 ± 0.12) × 10×10 exp |-(635 ± 55)/T|cm3 molecule−1 s−1, and the recommended value for 298 K is k = (1.25 ± 0.10) × 10−11 cm3 molecule−1 s−1. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 29: 67–71, 1997.  相似文献   

4.
A kinetic spectrophotometric investigation of the reaction of the hydrogen peroxide anion with methyl p-nitrophenyl sulfate in methanol solvent resulted in the evaluation of the pKa of HOOH in methanol at 25°C as 15.8 ± 0.2. Since normal kinetic procedures for the determination of the equilibrium constant K for the process CH3O? + H2O2 ? CH3OH + HO were found to be associated with high uncertainty, another procedure was devised to establish the magnitude of K. This method is based on an analysis of the changing slopes of plots of pseudo-first-order rate constants against the total base concentration as the stoichiometric amount of hydrogen peroxide is varied. The method is applicable to any system in which anionic nucleophiles generated in situ compete with solvent anions. Such a corroboration of kinetically determined equilibrium constants is believed essential. The kinetic data allow the specific rate constant kHOO-for the reaction of methyl p-nitrophenyl sulfate with hydrogen peroxide anions to be evaluated and yield the rate constant ratio k/k = 8.8 ± 2.2. This confirms the existence of an α effect at saturated carbon in this system.  相似文献   

5.
Reactions of oxygen atoms with ethylene, propene, and 2-butene were studied at room temperature under discharge flow conditions by resonance fluorescence spectroscopy of O and H atoms at pressures of 0.08 to 12 torr. The measured total rate constants of these reactions are K = (7.8 ± 0.6)·10?13cm3s?1,K = (4.3 ± 0.4) ± 10?12 cm3 s?1, K = (1.4 ± 0.4) · 10?11 cm3 s?1. The branching ratios of H atom elimination channels were measured for reactions of O atoms with ethylene and propene. No H-atom elimination was found for the reaction of O-atoms with 2-butene. A redistribution of reaction O + C2 channels with pressure was found. A mechanism of the O + C2 reaction was proposed and the possibility of its application to other olefins is discussed. On the basis of mechanism the pressure dependence of the total rate constant for reaction O + C2 was predicted and experimentally confirmed in the pressure range 0.08–1.46 torr.  相似文献   

6.
Hexafluoroacetone (HFA) and O2 were photolyzed at 147.0 nm to investigate their use in chemical actinometry. The products, CO for the former and O3 in the latter case, were monitored. For accurate comparison, both of these substances were irradiated by a single light source with two identical reaction cells at 180° to each other. The light intensities I were measured under the same integrated as well as instantaneous photon flux based on ? and ?CO (quantum yield) as 2 and 1, respectively. Optimum conditions for maximum product yield were 5.0 torr HFA pressure and an O2 flow rate of 200 ml/min at 1 atm pressure for a 20-minute photolysis period. For light intensity variations between 1.09 × 1014 and 2.10 × 1015 photons absorbed/sec, the ratio I/IHFA was found to be unity. Calibration with the commonly used N2O actinometer for a ? value of 1.41 showed that I/IHFA and I/I are unity. Both HFA and O2 are suitable chemical actinometers at 147.0 nm with ?CO and ? of 1 and 2, respectively. The light intensity determination in the first case involves the measurement of only one product which is noncondensible at 77°K, whereas wet analysis for O3, the only product, in the second actinometer is necessary. Both of these determinations are quite simple and are preferable over product analysis in N2O actiometry, wherein N2 separation from other noncondensibles at 77°K is required.  相似文献   

7.
Ignition delay times of acetonitrile (CH3CN) in mixtures containing acetonitrile and oxygen diluted in argon were studied behind reflected shock waves. The temperature range covered was 1420–1750 K at overall concentrations behind the reflected shock wave ranging from 2 to 4×10−5 mol/cm3. Over this temperature and concentration range the ignition delay times varied by approximately one order of magnitude, ranging from ca. 100 μs to slightly above 1 ms. From a total of some 70 tests the following correlation for the ignition delay times was derived: tign=9.77×10−12 exp(41.7×103/RT)×{[CH3CN]0.12[O2]−0.76[Ar]0.34} s, where concentrations are expressed in units of mol/cm3 and R is expressed in units of cal/(K mol). The ignition delay times were modeled by a reaction scheme containing 36 species and 111 elementary reactions. Good agreement between measured and calculated ignition delay times was obtained. A least-squares analysis of 60 computed ignition delay times from six different groups of initial conditions gave the following temperature and concentration dependence: E=46.2×103 cal/mol, β=0.43, β=−1.18, and βAr=0.18. The ignition process is initiated by H-atom ejection from acetonitrile. The addition of oxygen atoms to the system from the dissociation of molecular oxygen and from the reaction CH3CN+O2 → HO2·+CH2CN·is negligible. In view of the relatively high concentration of methyl radicals obtained in the reaction CH3CN+H → CH3+HCN, the branching step CH3+O2 → CH3O+O plays a more important role than the parallel step H+O2→ OH+O. A discussion of the mechanism in view of the sensitivity analysis is presented. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 29: 839–849, 1997  相似文献   

8.
The kinetics of the gas-phase reaction of the NO3 radical with naphthalene have been investigated at 150 torr O2 + 590 torr N2 and 600 torr O2 + 140 torr N2 at 298 ± 2 K. Relative rate measurements were carried out in reacting NO3? N2O5-naphthalene-propene-O2? N2 mixtures by longpath Fourier transform infrared absorption spectroscopy. A rate constant ratio for the reactions of O2 and NO2 with the NO3-naphthalene adduct of k/k < 4 × 10?7 was obtained from the competition between O2 and NO2 for reaction with the NO3-naphthalene adduct and thermal decomposition of the adduct back to reactants. Atmospheric pressure ionization MS/MS measurements of the nitronaphthalene products of the NO3 radical-initiated reaction of naphthalene are consistent with the proposed reaction mechanism, and the atmospheric implications of the data are discussed. © 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
Kinetic solvent isotope effects (KSIE) were measured for the hydrolyses of acetals of benzaldehydes in aqueous solutions covering the pH (pD) range of 1–6. For p-methoxybenzaldehyde diethyl acetal, k/k = 1.8–3.1, depending on the procedure used to calculate the KSIE and on the pH (pD) range used as the basis for k(k). It is shown that this variation is an experimental artifact, and is a characteristic of KSIE measurements in general. It is recommended that k be calculated from a least-squares fit of data to the equation kobs = k[L+], and that the KSIE be reported as k/k. The limitation remains, however, that the KSIE measured for a variety of substances over quite different pH (pD) ranges may not be comparable to more than ?20%. The source of these observations is discussed in terms of small changes in the activity coefficient ratios (a specific salt effect), including the solvent isotope effect on the activity coefficient ratio [eq. (3)].  相似文献   

10.
The bimolecular rate coefficients k and k were measured using the relative rate technique at (297 ± 3) K and 1 atmosphere total pressure. Values of (2.7 ± 0.7) and (4.0 ± 1.0) × 10?15 cm3 molecule?1 s?1 were observed for k and k, respectively. In addition, the products of 2‐butoxyethanol + NO3? and benzyl alcohol + NO3? gas‐phase reactions were investigated. Derivatizing agents O‐(2,3,4,5,6‐pentafluorobenzyl)hydroxylamine and N, O‐bis (trimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide and gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC/MS) were used to identify the reaction products. For 2‐butoxyethanol + NO3? reaction: hydroxyacetaldehyde, 3‐hydroxypropanal, 4‐hydroxybutanal, butoxyacetaldehyde, and 4‐(2‐oxoethoxy)butan‐2‐yl nitrate were the derivatized products observed. For the benzyl alcohol + NO3? reaction: benzaldehyde ((C6H5)C(?O)H) was the only derivatized product observed. Negative chemical ionization was used to identify the following nitrate products: [(2‐butoxyethoxy)(oxido)amino]oxidanide and benzyl nitrate, for 2‐butoxyethanol + NO3? and benzyl alcohol + NO3?, respectively. The elucidation of these products was facilitated by mass spectrometry of the derivatized reaction products coupled with a plausible 2‐butoxyethanol or benzyl alcohol + NO3? reaction mechanisms based on previously published volatile organic compound + NO3? gas‐phase mechanisms. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
  • 1 This article is a U.S. Government work and, as such, is in the public domain of the United States of America.
  • © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 44: 778–788, 2012  相似文献   

    11.
    The results of comprehensive equilibrium and kinetic studies of the iron(III)–sulfate system in aqueous solutions at I = 1.0 M (NaClO4), in the concentration ranges of T = 0.15–0.3 mM, and at pH 0.7–2.5 are presented. The iron(III)–containing species detected are FeOH2+ (=FeH?1), (FeOH) (=Fe2H?2), FeSO, and Fe(SO4) with formation constants of log β = ?2.84, log β = ?2.88, log β = 2.32, and log β = 3.83. The formation rate constants of the stepwise formation of the sulfate complexes are k1a = 4.4 × 103 M?1 s?1 for the ${\rm Fe}^{3+} + {\rm SO}_4^{2-}\,\stackrel{k_{1a}}{\rightleftharpoons}\, {\rm FeSO}_4^+The results of comprehensive equilibrium and kinetic studies of the iron(III)–sulfate system in aqueous solutions at I = 1.0 M (NaClO4), in the concentration ranges of T = 0.15–0.3 mM, and at pH 0.7–2.5 are presented. The iron(III)–containing species detected are FeOH2+ (=FeH?1), (FeOH) (=Fe2H?2), FeSO, and Fe(SO4) with formation constants of log β = ?2.84, log β = ?2.88, log β = 2.32, and log β = 3.83. The formation rate constants of the stepwise formation of the sulfate complexes are k1a = 4.4 × 103 M?1 s?1 for the ${\rm Fe}^{3+} + {\rm SO}_4^{2-}\,\stackrel{k_{1a}}{\rightleftharpoons}\, {\rm FeSO}_4^+$ step and k2 = 1.1 × 103 M?1 s?1 for the ${\rm FeSO}_4^+ + {\rm SO}_4^{2-} \stackrel{k_2}{\rightleftharpoons}\, {\rm Fe}({\rm SO}_4)_2^-$ step. The mono‐sulfate complex is also formed in the ${\rm Fe}({\rm OH})^{2+} + {\rm SO}_4^{2-} \stackrel{k_{1b}}{\longrightarrow} {\rm FeSO}_4^+$ reaction with the k1b = 2.7 × 105 M?1 s?1 rate constant. The most surprising result is, however, that the 2 FeSO? Fe3+ + Fe(SO4) equilibrium is established well before the system as a whole reaches its equilibrium state, and the main path of the formation of Fe(SO4) is the above fast (on the stopped flow scale) equilibrium process. The use and advantages of our recently elaborated programs for the evaluation of equilibrium and kinetic experiments are briefly outlined. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 40: 114–124, 2008  相似文献   

    12.
    The homogeneous gas-phase thermal decomposition kinetics of germane have been measured in a single-pulse shock tube between 950 and 1060 K at pressures around 4000 torr. The initial decomposition is GeH4 → GeH2 + H2 in its pressure-dependent regime, with log k = 13.83 ± 0.78 – 50,750 ± 3570 cal/2.303RT. RRKM calculations suggest that the high-pressure Arrhenius parameters are log k GeH4(M → ∞) = 15.5 – 54,300 cal/2.303RT. Extrapolations to static system pyrolysis conditions (T ~ 600 K, P ~ 200 torr) give homogeneous reaction rates which are much slower than those observed, hence the static system pyrolysis of germane must be predominantly heterogeneous. Shock-initiated pyrolysis reaction stoichiometry is 2 mol H2 per mole GeH4, suggesting that the subsequent decomposition of germylene is essentially quantitative. Investigations of the hydrogen product yields for pyrolysis of GeD4 in øCH3 further indicate that the germylene decomposition reaction is mainly GeH2 → H2 + Ge, but that a small amount of reaction to H atoms may also occur.  相似文献   

    13.
    The substituted thiourea, 4‐methyl‐3‐thiosemicarbazide, was oxidized by iodate in acidic medium. In high acid concentrations and in stoichiometric excess of iodate, the reaction displays an induction period followed by the formation of aqueous iodine. In stoichiometric excess of methylthiosemicarbazide and high acid concentration, the reaction shows a transient formation of aqueous iodine. The stoichiometry of the reaction is: 4IO + 3CH3NHC(S)NHNH2 + 3H2O → 4I + 3SO + 3CH3NHC(O)NHNH2 + 6H+ (A). Iodine formation is due to the Dushman reaction that produces iodine from iodide formed from the reduction of iodate: IO + 5I + 6H+ → 3I2(aq) + 3H2O (B). Transient iodine formation is due to the efficient acid catalysis of the Dushman reaction. The iodine produced in process B is consumed by the methylthiosemicarbazide substrate. The direct reaction of iodine and methylthiosemicarbazide was also studied. It has a stoichiometry of 4I2(aq) + CH3NHC(S)NHNH2 + 5H2O → 8I + SO + CH3NHC(O)NHNH2 + 10H+ (C). The reaction exhibits autoinhibition by iodide and acid. Inhibition by I is due to the formation of the triiodide species, I, and inhibition by acid is due to the protonation of the sulfur center that deactivates it to further electrophilic attack. In excess iodate conditions, the stoichiometry of the reaction is 8IO + 5CH3NHC(S)NHNH2 + H2O → 4I2 + 5SO + 5CH3NHC(O)NHNH2 + 2H+ (D) that is a linear combination of processes A and B. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 32: 193–203, 2000  相似文献   

    14.
    The kinetic isotope effects in the reaction of methane (CH4) with Cl atoms are studied in a relative rate experiment at 298 ± 2 K and 1013 ± 10 mbar. The reaction rates of 13CH4, 12CH3D, 12CH2D2, 12CHD3, and 12CD4 with Cl radicals are measured relative to 12CH4 in a smog chamber using long path FTIR detection. The experimental data are analyzed with a nonlinear least squares spectral fitting method using measured high‐resolution spectra as well as cross sections from the HITRAN database. The relative reaction rates of 12CH4, 13CH4, 12CH3D, 12CH2D2, 12CHD3, and 12CD4 with Cl are determined as k/k = 1.06 ± 0.01, k/k = 1.47 ± 0.03, k/k = 2.45 ± 0.05, k/k = 4.7 ± 0.1, k/k = 14.7 ± 0.3. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 37: 110–118, 2005  相似文献   

    15.
    Pseudo‐first‐order rate constants (kobs) for the cleavage of phthalimide in the presence of piperidine (Pip) vary linearly with the total concentration of Pip ([Pip]T) at a constant content of methanol in mixed aqueous solvents containing 2% v/v acetonitrile. Such linear variation of kobs against [Pip]T exists within the methanol content range 10%–∼80% v/v. The change in kobs with the change in [Pip]T at 98% v/v CH3OH in mixed methanol‐acetonitrile solvent shows the relationship: kobs = k[Pip]T + k[Pip], where respective k and k represent apparent second‐order and third‐order rate constants for nucleophilic and general base‐catalyzed piperidinolysis of phthalimide. The values of kobs, obtained within [Pip]T range 0.02–0.40 M at 0.03 M NaOH and 20 as well as 50% v/v CH3OH reveal the relationship: kobs = k0/(1 + {kn[Pip]/kOX[OX]T}), where k0 is the pseudo‐first‐order rate constant for hydrolysis of phthalimide, kn and kOX represent nucleophilic second‐order rate constants for the reaction of Pip with phthalimide and for the XO‐catalyzed cyclization of N‐piperidinylphthalamide to phthalimide, respectively, and [OX]T = [NaOH] + [OXre], where [OXre] = [OHre] + [CH3Ore]. The reversible reactions of Pip with H2O and CH3OH produce OHre and CH3Ore ions. The effects of mixed methanol‐water solvents on the rates of piperidinolysis of PTH reveal a nonlinear decrease in k with the increase in the content of methanol. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 33: 29–40, 2001  相似文献   

    16.
    Terpenes and terpene alcohols are prevalent compounds found in a wide variety of consumer products including soaps, flavorings, perfumes, and air fresheners used in the indoor environment. Knowing the reaction rate of these chemicals with the nitrate radical is an important factor in determining their fate indoors. In this study, the bimolecular rate constants of k (16.6 ± 4.2) × 10?12, k (12.1 ± 3) × 10?12, and k (2.3 ± 0.6) × 10?14 cm3 molecule?1 s?1 were measured using the relative rate technique for the reaction of the nitrate radical (NO3?) with 2,6‐dimethyl‐2,6‐octadien‐8‐ol (geraniol), 3,7‐dimethyl‐6‐octen‐1‐ol (citronellol), and 2,6‐dimethyl‐7‐octen‐2‐ol (dihydromyrcenol) at (297 ± 3) K and 1 atmosphere total pressure. Using the geraniol, citronellol, or dihydromyrcenol + NO3? rate constants reported here, pseudo‐first‐order rate lifetimes (k′) of 1.5, 1.1, and 0.002 h?1 were determined, respectively. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 42: 669–675, 2010  相似文献   

    17.
    The quantum yields of SO3 formation have been determined in pure SO2 and in SO2 mixtures with NO, CO2, and O2 using both flow and static systems. In separate series of experiments excitation of SO2 was effected within the forbidden band, SO2(3B1) ← \documentclass{article}\pagestyle{empty}\begin{document}$$ {\rm SO}_2 (\tilde X,^1 A_1 ) $$\end{document}, and within the first allowed singlet band at 3130 Å. The values of Φ were found to be sensitive to the flow rate of the reactants. These results and the apparently divergent quantum yield results of Cox [10], Allen and coworkers [24, 26, 29], and Okuda and coworkers [11] were rationalized quantitatively in terms of the significant occurrence of the reactions SO + SO3 → 2SO2 (2), and 2SO → SO2 + S [or (SO)2] (3), in experiments of long residence time. From the present rate data, values of the rate constants were estimated, k2=(1.2±0.7) × 106; k3=(5±4) × 105 l˙/mole · sec. Φ values from triplet excitation experiments at high flow rates of NO? SO2 and CO2? SO2 mixtures showed the sole reactant with SO2 leading to SO3 formation in this system to be SO2(3B1); SO2(3B1) + SO2 → SO3 + SO(3Σ?) (la); k=(4.2±0.4) × 107 l./mole · sec. With excitation of SO2 at 3130 Å both singlet and triplet excited states play a role in SO3 formation. If the reactive singlet state is 1B1, the long-lived fluorescent state, SO2(1B1) + SO2 → SO3 + SO (1 Δ or 3Σ?) (lb), then k=(2.2±0.5) × 109 l./mole · sec. From the observed inhibition of SO formation by added nitric oxide, it was found that the SO3-forming triplet state, generated in this singlet excited SO2 system, had a relative reactivity toward SO2 and NO which was equal within the experimental error to that observed here for the SO2(3B1) species. Either SO2(3B1) molecules were created with an unexpectedly high efficiency in 3130 Å excited SO2(1B1) quenching collisions, or another reactive triplet (presumably 3A2 or 3B2) of almost identical reactivity to SO2(3B1) was important here.  相似文献   

    18.
    Rate constants for the reaction O(3P) + SO2 + M have been determined over the temperature range of 299°–440°K, using a flash photolysis–NO2 chemiluminescence technique. For M?Ar, the Arrhenius expression was obtained. At room temperature k2Ar = (1.05 ± 0.21) × 10?33 cm6/molec2·sec. In addition, the rate constants k2 = (1.37 + 0.27) × 10?33 cm6/molec2·sec, k2 = (9.5 ± 3.0) ± 10?33 cm6/molec2·sec, k3 = (1.1 ± 0.2) ± 10?31 cm6/molec2·sec, and k3 = (2.6 ? 0.9) ± 10?31 cm6/molec2·sec were obtained at room temperature where k3M is the rate constant for the reaction O + NO + M → NO2 + M. The rate data are compared and discussed with literature values.  相似文献   

    19.
    In the radiolysis of water vapor containing small concentrations of cyclohexane, the principal products which account for about 98% of all end products are found to be hydrogen, cyclohexene, and bicyclohexyl. Cyclohexene and bicyclohexyl yields were determined over a range of temperatures (70–200°C), total pressures (50–2400 torr), and total doses (0.15–2.0 Mrad). The disproportionation–combination ratio k/k for c-C6H11 radicals could be determined as 0.56 ± 0.01 from the ratio of cyclohexene to bicyclohexyl yield. By using c-C6D12, the ratio k/k for c-C6D11 radicals is found to be 0.38 ± 0.01. Comparison of the reactivity pattern of C6H11 and C6D11 radicals leads to (k)/(k)/(k/k) = 1.47 ± 0.02. The corresponding values for the reactions of c-C6H11 with c-C6D11 were also determined.  相似文献   

    20.
    Recent theoretical studies of the alkaline hydrolysis of the amide bond have indicated that the nucleophilic attack of the hydroxide ion at the carbonyl carbon of the amide group is rate limiting. This is shown to be inconsistent with a large amount of experimental observations where the expulsion of the leaving group has been shown to be rate limiting. A kinetic approach has been described, which allows us to diagnose whether the pH‐independent/uncatalyzed hydrolysis of amides involves (a) both the uncatalyzed water reaction (kw) and H+‐ (kH) and HO?‐catalyzed (kOH) water reaction, (b) only the kw reaction, or (c) only the k + kOH reaction. The analysis described in this critical review does not favor the recent theoretical claims of the absence of the water reaction in the pH‐independent/uncatalyzed hydrolysis of formamide and urea. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 41: 599–611, 2009  相似文献   

    设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

    Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号