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1.
The oxidation of fluorene by vanadium(V) in aqueous acetic acid containing sulfuric acid (1.0M) at 50°C produces fluorenone and 2-hydroxy diphenyl 2′-carboxaldehyde. The order with respect to each reactant is found to be 1. The order dependence on sulfuric acid concentration is 4, indicating that V(OH)23+ could be the active species. An increase in the acetic acid percentage in the solvent medium increases the rate of the reaction. The effect of solvent variation has been discussed in the light of the acidity function and the polarity of the medium. The effect of substituents on the rate has been studied for seven substituted fluorenes, and a linear relationship exists between log k versus σ values with the slope ρ = -3.2. A small isotope effect is observed for the oxidation of the parent compound (kH/kD = 1.2). The effect of temperature on the rate of the reaction has been studied, and the activation parameters are discussed. A mechanism involving the rate-limiting formation of a cation-radical intermediate is proposed.  相似文献   

2.
The heterogeneous polymerization of acrylonitrile photoinitiated by naphthalene is influenced by the polarity of the reaction medium. The rate of initiation increases with the increasing dielectric strength of the reaction medium. A similar trend is observable for Stern–Volmer constants of naphthalene fluorescence quenching by acrylonitrile. The ratio kp/kt1/2 of the rate constant for propagation and termination reactions is not influenced by a change in the polarity of the reaction medium. The effect of viscosity on the value of kp/kt1/2 known for polymerization in a homogeneous medium was not observed in the reaction systems studied.  相似文献   

3.
p-Aminoazobenzene (PAAB) is one of the important monoazo dyes and its oxidation kinetic study is of much use in understanding the mechanistic profile of PAAB in redox reactions. Consequently, the kinetics of oxidation of PAAB by sodium N-chlorobenzenesulfonamide or chloramine-B (CAB) in HClO4 medium and in NaOH medium catalyzed by ruthenium(III) chloride (RuIII) have been investigated at 298 K. U.v.–vis spectrophotometry was used as a basic analytical approach in this study. Under an identical set of experimental conditions, the reactions of PAAB–CAB in HClO4 medium were facile, but the reactions became too slow to be studied in alkaline medium and hence ruthenium(III) chloride has been used as a catalyst in alkaline medium. The stoichiometry (1:2) and oxidation products (nitrosobenzene and p-nitrosoaniline) are the same in both media, but the kinetic and mechanistic patterns were found to be different. The experimental rate laws obtained are: − d[CAB]/dt = k [CAB]0 [PAAB]0 [H+] in acid medium and − d[CAB]0/dt = k [CAB]0 [PAAB]0[OH] x [RuIII] y in alkaline medium, where x and y are less than unity. The reaction was examined with reference to changes in (a) concentration of benzenesulfonamide, (b) concentration of added neutral salts, (c) ionic strength, (d) dielectric permitivity and (e) solvent isotope effect. The reaction was also studied at different temperatures and the overall activation parameters have been evaluated. The oxidation reaction fails to induce the polymerization of added acrylonitrile. C6H4SO2NHCl and C6H4SO2NCl have been postulated as the reactive oxidizing species in acidic and alkaline media, respectively. It was found that the reactions are nearly 20 times faster in acid medium in comparison with alkaline medium. It was also observed that ruthenium(III) was an efficient catalyst for the facile oxidation of PAAB by CAB in alkaline medium by making the reaction go twelve-fold faster than the uncatalyzed reactions. The catalytic constant (K C) has been calculated at different temperatures and the values of activation parameters with respect to ruthenium(III) have also been evaluated in alkaline medium. The observed results have been explained by plausible mechanisms and the relative rate laws have been deduced.  相似文献   

4.
Ornidazole is an antiparasitic drug having a wide spectrum of activity. Literature survey has revealed that no attention has been paid towards the oxidation of ornidazole with any oxidant from the kinetic and mechanistic view point. Also no one has examined the role of platinum group metal ions as catalysts in the oxidation of this drug. Such studies are of much use in understanding the mechanistic profile of ornidazole in redox reactions and provide an insight into the interaction of metal ions with the substrate in biological systems. For these reasons, the Ru(III)- and Os(VIII)-catalyzed kinetics of oxidation of ornidazole with chloramine-T have been studied in HCl and NaOH media, respectively at 313 K. The oxidation products and kinetic patterns were found to be different in acid and alkaline media. Under comparable experimental conditions, in Ru(III)-catalyzed oxidation the rate law is −d[CAT]/dt = k [CAT]o[ornidazole]ox[H+]y[Ru(III)]z and it takes the form −d[CAT]/dt = k [CAT]o[ornidazole]ox[OH]y[Os(VIII)][ArSO2NH2]z for Os(VIII)-catalyzed reaction, where x, y and z are less than unity. In acid medium, 1-chloro-3-(2-methyl-5-nitroimidazole-1-yl)propan-2-one and in alkaline medium, 1-hydroxy-3-(2-methyl-5-nitroimidazole-1-yl)propan-2-one were characterized as the oxidation products of ornidazole by GC–MS analysis. The reactions were studied at different temperatures and the overall activation parameters have been computed. The solvent isotope effect was studied using D2O. Under identical set of experimental conditions, the kinetics of Ru(III) catalyzed oxidation of ornidazole by CAT in acid medium have been compared with uncatalyzed reactions. The relative rates revealed that the catalyzed reactions are about 5-fold faster whereas in Os(VIII) catalyzed reactions, it is around 9 times. The catalytic constant (KC) has been calculated for both the catalysts at different temperatures and activation parameters with respect to each catalyst have been evaluated. The observed experimental results have been explained by plausible mechanisms. Related rate laws have been worked out.  相似文献   

5.
A new single-step approach to cyclopenta[a]naphthalenes through TiCl4-catalyzed reactions of 1-trimethylsilyloxycyclopentene with arylacetaldehydes was proposed. 8-Methoxy-5-methyl-2,3-dihydro-1H-cyclopenta[a]naphthalene and its derivatives were studied in oxidation and bromination reactions, as well as in hydrolytic cleavage of the O-Me bond.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetics of the redox reaction between mandelic acid (MA) and ceric sulfate have been studied in aqueous sulfuric acid solutions and in H2SO4? MClO4 (M+ = H+, Li+, Na+) and H2SO4? MHSO4 (M+ = Li+, Na+, K+) mixtures under various experimental conditions of total electrolyte concentration (that is, ionic strength) and temperature. The oxidation reaction has been found to occur via two paths according to the following rate law: rate = k[MA] [Ce(IV)], where k = k1 + k2/(1 + a)2[HSO4?]2 = k1 + k2/(1 + 1/a)2[SO42?]2, a being a constant. The cations considered exhibit negative specific effects upon the overall oxidation rate following the order H+ ? Li+ < Na+ < K+. The observed negative cation effects on the rate constant k1 are in the order Na+ < Li+ < H+, whereas the order is in reverse for k2, namely, H+ ? Li+ < Na+. Lithium and hydrogen ions exhibit similar medium effects only when relatively small amounts of electrolytes are replaced. The type of the cation used does not affect significantly the activation parameters.  相似文献   

7.
Characteristic features of naphthalene oxidation and the kinetics of naphthalene pyrolysis in supercritical water (SCW) were studied using a batch reactor under isobaric conditions at a pressure of 30 MPa, in the temperature range from 660 °C to 750 °C, and for different levels of oxygen supply, varying from 0 to 2.5 moles of O2 per mole of naphthalene. The pyrolysis produces benzene, toluene, methane, hydrogen, soot, and carbon oxides. The rate constant for naphthalene pyrolysis in SCW was found to be k = 1012.3±0.2exp(–E/T) s–1 where E = 35400±500 K. For T > 660 °C, water participates in the chemical reactions of naphthalene conversion, particularly, in the formation of carbon oxides. The conversion of naphthalene in pure SCW is accompanied by heat evolution. Molecular oxygen oxidizes a part of naphthalene completely, i.e., to CO2 and H2O, this reaction being so prompt that in some cases, self-heating of the mixture and thermal explosion in the reactor were observed.  相似文献   

8.
The kinetics of oxidation of aliphatic amines viz., ethylamine, n-butylamine, isopropylamine (primary amines), diethylamine (secondary amine), and triethylamine (tertiary amine) by chloramine-T have been studied in NaOH medium catalyzed by osmium (VIII) and in perchloric acid medium with ruthenium(III) as catalyst. The order of reaction in [Chloramine-T] is always found to be unity. A zero order dependence of rate with respect to each [OH?] and [Amine] has been observed during the osmium(VIII) catalyzed oxidation of diethylamine and triethylamine while a retarding effect of [OH?] or [Amine] on the rate of oxidation is observed in case of osmium(VIII) catalyzed oxidation of primary aliphatic amines. The ruthenium(III) catalyzed oxidation of amines follow almost similar kinetics. The order of reactions in [Amine] or [Acid] decreases from unity at higher amine or acid concentrations. The rate of oxidation is proportional to {k′ and k″ [Ruthenium(III)] or [Osmium(VIII)]} where k′ and k″ (having different values in case of ruthenium(III) and osmium(VIII)) are the rate constants for uncatalyzed and catalyzed path respectively. The suitable mechanism consisting with the kinetic data is proposed in each case and discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The kinetics of the oxidation of sulfanilic acid (SAA) by sodium N-chloro-p-toluenesulfonamide (CAT) in the presence and absence of ruthenium(III) chloride have been investigated at 303 K in perchloric acid medium. The reaction shows a first-order dependence on [CAT]o and a non-linear dependence on both [SAA]o and [HClO4] for both the ruthenium(III)-catalyzed and uncatalyzed reactions. The order with respect to [RuIII] is unity. The effects of added p-toluenesulfonamide, halide, ionic strength, and dielectric constant have been studied. Activation parameters have been evaluated. The rate of the reaction increases in the D2O medium. The stoichiometry of the reaction was found to be 1:1 and the oxidation product of SAA was identified as N-hydroxyaminobenzene-4-sulfonic acid. The ruthenium(III)-catalyzed reactions are about four-fold faster than the uncatalyzed reactions. The protonated conjugate acid (CH3C6H4SO2NH2Cl+) is postulated as the reactive oxidizing species in both the cases.  相似文献   

10.
The oxidation of lomefloxacin (LOM) and balofloxacin (BAL) under the influence of azo initiator of radical reactions of 4,4′-azobis(4-cyanopentanoic acid) (ACVA) and H2O2 was examined. Oxidation using H2O2 was performed at room temperature while using ACVA at temperatures: 40, 50, 60 °C. Additionally, the oxidation process of BAL under the influence of KMnO4 in an acidic medium was investigated. New stability-indicating HPLC methods were developed in order to evaluate the oxidation process. Chromatographic analysis was carried out using the Kinetex 5u XB—C18 100A column, Phenomenex (Torrance, CA, USA) (250 × 4.6 mm, 5 μm particle size, core shell type). The chromatographic separation was achieved while using isocratic elution and a mobile phase with the composition of 0.05 M phosphate buffer (pH = 3.20 adjusted with o-phosphoric acid) and acetonitrile (87:13 v/v for LOM; 80:20 v/v for BAL). The column was maintained at 30 °C. The methods were validated according to the ICH guidelines, and it was found that they met the acceptance criteria. An oxidation process followed kinetics of the second order reaction. The most probable structures of LOM and BAL degradation products formed were assigned by the UHPLC/MS/MS method.  相似文献   

11.
The kinetics of oxidation of ethanolamines, monoethanolamine (MEA), diethanolamine (DEA), and triethanolamine (TEA), by sodium N‐bromobenzenesulfonamide or bromamine‐B (BAB) in alkaline buffer medium (pH 8.7–12.2) has been studied at 40°C. The three reactions follow identical kinetics with first‐order in [oxidant] and fractional‐order each in [substrate] and [OH?]. Under comparable experimental conditions, the rate of oxidation increases in the order: DEA > TEA > MEA. The added reaction product, benzenesulfonamide, retards the reaction rate. The addition of halide ions and the variation of ionic strength of the medium have no significant effect on the rate. The dielectric effect is negative. The solvent isotope effect k′(H2O)/k′(D2O) ≈ 0.92. Activation parameters for the composite reaction and for the rate‐limiting step were computed from the Eyring plots. Michaelis‐Menten type of kinetics is observed. The formation and decomposition constants of ethanolamine‐BAB complexes are evaluated. An isokinetic relationship is observed with β = 430 K indicating that enthalpy factors control the rate. For each substrate, a mechanism consistent with the kinetic data has been proposed. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 33: 480–490, 2001  相似文献   

12.
The kinetics of oxidation of aldosugars and ketosugar by quinquevalent vanadium in binary mixtures of DMSO–water and acetic acid–water in sulfuric acid medium have been studied. The reaction is first order in both oxidant and substrate. The effect of acidity on the reaction kinetics has been determined. The effect of acidity shows a clear difference. The ketose has a unit dependence, whereas aldoses have a 0.5 dependence in H0. The role of solvent in these reactions has also been studied, and the effect of temperature on these reactions has been determined. A suitable mechanism has been postulated taking all the observed facts into consideration.  相似文献   

13.
The oxidation of glycolic, lactic, malic, and a few substituted mandelic acids by 2,2′‐bipyridinium chlorochromate (BPCC) in dimethylsulphoxide leads to the formation of corresponding oxoacids. The reaction is first order each in BPCC and the hydroxy acids. The reaction is catalyzed by the hydrogen ions. The hydrogen ion dependence has the form: kobs = a + b [H+]. The oxidation of α‐deuteriomandelic acid exhibited a substantial primary kinetic isotope effect (kH/kd = 5.29 at 303 K). Oxidation of p‐methylmandelic acid was studied in 19 different organic solvents. The solvent effect has been analyzed by using Kamlet's and Swain's multiparametric equations. A mechanism involving a hydride ion transfer via a chromate ester is proposed. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 34: 248–254, 2002  相似文献   

14.
Oxidation kinetics of benzaldehyde and some of its ortho- and para-monosubstituted derivatives have been studied using cetylpicolinium dichromates, a class of novel phase transfer oxidants, in dichloromethane medium. The rate of reaction is first order with respect to oxidant and fractional order with respect to the substrates. The Michaelis–Menten type oxidation was observed with respect to the substrates. Benzaldehydes are found to be oxidized to their corresponding acids. The mechanism of oxidation reaction has been suggested based on the solvent isotope effect, Hammett plot, and thermodynamic study. The solvent isotope effect (kCHCl3/kCDCl3 = 1.57) indicates the involvement of hydrogen exchange with the medium during oxidation reactions. A strong influence of specific solute–solvent interactions on the rate of the reaction is observed. Both the electron-withdrawing and electron-releasing substituents on the substrates accelerate the rate of reaction.  相似文献   

15.
Kinetics of oxidation of α ‐amino acids, glycine, valine, alanine, and phenylalanine, by sodium N‐chloro‐p‐toluenesulfonamide or chloramine‐T (CAT) has been investigated in HClO4 medium at 30°C. The rate shows first‐order dependence on both CAT and amino acid concentrations and an inverse first‐order on [H+]. The variation of ionic strength and the addition of p‐toluenesulfonamide and Cl? ion had no effect on the reaction rate. Decrease of dielectric constant of the medium by increasing the MeOH content decreased the rate. Rate studies in D2O medium showed the inverse solvent‐isotope effect of kD2O/kH2O=0.50. Proton‐inventory studies were carried out using H2O–D2O mixtures. The activation parameters have been computed. The proposed mechanism and the derived rate law are consistent with the observed kinetic data. An isokinetic relationship is observed with β=323 K, indicating enthalpy as a controlling factor. The rate of oxidation increases in the following order: Gly < Val < Phe < Ala. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 34: 49–55, 2002  相似文献   

16.
The oxidation of primary alcohols by sodium N-chloroethylcarbamate in acid solution, results in the formation of corresponding aldehydes. The reaction is first order with respect to the oxidant and alcohol. The rate increases with an increase in acidity. The oxidation of α,α-dideuterioethanol exhibited a primary kinetic isotope, kH/kD = 2.11 at 298 K. The value of solvent isotope effect k(H2O)/k(D2O) = 2.23 at 298 K. Addition of ethyl carbamate does not affect the rate. (EtOC(OH)NHCl)+ has been postulated as the reactive species. Plots of (log k2 + Ho) against (Ho + log[H+]) are linear with the slope, ?, having values from 1.78–1.87. This suggested a proton abstraction by water in the rate-determining step. The rates of oxidation of alcohols bearing both electron-withdrawing and electron-donating groups are more than that of methanol. A concerted mechanism involving transfer of a hydride ion from the C? H bond of the alcohol tothe oxidant and removal of a proton from the O? H group by a water molecule has been proposed.  相似文献   

17.
Kinetics and mechanism of oxidation of formic and oxalic acids by quinolinium fluorochromate (QFC) have been studied in dimethylsulphoxide. The main product of oxidation is carbon dioxide. The reaction is first-order with respect to QFC. Michaelis-Menten type of kinetics were observed with respect to the reductants. The reaction is acid-catalysed and the acid dependence has the form: kobs =a +b[H+]. The oxidation of α-deuterioformic acid exhibits a substantial primary kinetic isotope effect (kH/kD = 6.01 at 303 K). The reaction has been studied in nineteen different organic solvents and the solvent effect has been analysed using Taft’s and Swain’s multiparametric equations. The temperature dependence of the kinetic isotope effect indicates the presence of a symmetrical cyclic transition state in the rate-determining step. Suitable mechanisms have been proposed.  相似文献   

18.
The oxidation of glycolic, lactic, malic, and a few substituted mandelic acids by tetraethylammonium chlorochromate (TEACC) in dimethylsulfoxide leads to the formation of corresponding oxoacids. The reaction is first order each in TEACC and hydroxy acids. Reaction is failed to induce the polymerization of acrylonitrile. The oxidation of α‐deuteriomandelic acid shows the presence of a primary kinetic isotope effect (kH/kD = 5.63 at 298 K). The reaction does not exhibit the solvent isotope effect. The reaction is catalyzed by the hydrogen ions. The hydrogen ion dependence has the following form: kobs = a + b[H+]. Oxidation of p‐methylmandelic acid has been studied in 19 different organic solvents. The solvent effect has been analyzed by using Kamlet's and Swain's multiparametric equations. A mechanism involving a hydride ion transfer via a chromate ester is proposed. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 42: 50–55, 2010  相似文献   

19.
The oxidation of [CoII(nta)(ox)(H2O)2]3− and [CoII(nta)(ph)(H2O)2]3− (nta = nitrilotriacetate, ox = oxalic acid and ph = phthalic acid) by periodate have been studied kinetically in aqueous solution over 20–40 °C and a variety of pH ranges. The rate of oxidation of [CoII(nta)(ox)(H2O)2]3− by periodate, obeys the following equation: d[CoIII]/dt = [CoII(nta)(ox)(H2O)23−][H5IO6] {k 4 K 5 + (k 5 K 6 K 2/[H+]} while the reaction of [CoII(nta)(ph)(H2O)2]3− with periodate in aqueous acidic medium obeys the following rate law: d[CoIII]/dt = k 6 K 8[CoII]T [IVII]T/{1 + [H+]/K 7 + K 8[IVII] T }. Initial cobalt(III) products were formed and slowly converted to final products, fitting an inner-sphere mechanism. Thermodynamic activation parameters have been calculated. A common mechanism for the oxidation of ternary nitrilotriacetatocobalt(II) complexes by periodate is proposed and supported by an excellent isokinetic relationship between ΔH* and ΔS* values for these reactions.  相似文献   

20.
The kinetics of oxidation of four vicinal diols, four nonvicinal diols, and one of their monoethers by pyridinium bromochromate (PBC) have been studied in dimethyl sulfoxide. The main product of oxidation is the corresponding hydroxyaldehyde. The reaction is first-order with respect to each the diol and PBC. The reaction is acid-catalyzed and the acid dependence has the form: kobs=a+b[H+]. The oxidation of [1,1,2,2-2H4]ethanediol exhibited a primary kinetic isotope effect (kH/k D=6.70 at 298 K). The reaction has been studied in 19 organic solvents including dimethyl sulfoxide and the solvent effect has been analyzed using multiparametric equations. The temperature dependence of the kinetic isotope effect indicates the presence of a symmetrical transition state in the rate-determining step. A suitable mechanism has been proposed. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 30: 285–290, 1998.  相似文献   

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