首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Unimolecular reactions of the isolated immonium ions CH3CH = NH+C4H9, CH3CH2Ch = NH+C4H9 and (CH3)2C = NH+C4H9
Authors:Richard D. Bowen  Alex. W. Colburn  Peter J. Derrick
Abstract:The reactions of ten metastable immonium ions of general structure R1R2C?NH+C4H9 (R1 = H, R2 = CH3, C2H5; R1 = R2 = CH3) are reported and discussed. Elimination of C4H8 is usually the dominant fragmentation pathway. This process gives rise to a Gaussian metastable peak; it is interpreted in terms of a mechanism involving ion-neutral complexes containing incipient butyl) cations. Metastable immonium ions ontaining an isobutyl group are unique in undergoing a minor amount of imine (R1R2C?NH) loss. This decomposition route, which also produces a Gaussian metastable peak, decreases in importance as the basicity of the imine increases. The correlation between imine loss and the presence of an isobutyl group is rationalized by the rearrangement of the appropriate ion-neutral complexes in which there are isobutyl cations to the isomeric complexes containing the thermodynamically more stable tert-butyl cations. A sizeable amount of a third reaction, expulsion of C3H6, is observed for metastable n-C4H9 +NH?CR1R2 ions; in contrast to C4H8 and R1R2C?NH loss, C3H6 elimination occurs with a large kinetic energy release (40–48 kJ mol?1) and is evidenced by a dish-topped metastable peak. This process is explained using a two-step mechanism involving a 1,5-hydride shift, followed by cleavage of the resultant secondary open-chain cations, CH3CH+ CH2CH2NHCHR1R2.
Keywords:
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