Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5218110 | Tetrahedron | 2013 | 7 Pages |
The oxygenation of 4â²-substituted 1H-2-phenyl-3-hydroxy-4-oxoquinolines (PhquinH2) in a DMSO/H2O (50/50) solution leads to the cleavage products at the C2-C3 bond in about 75% yield at room temperature. The oxygenation, deduced from the product compositions, has two main pathways, one proceeding via an endoperoxide leading to CO-release, and the other through a 1,2-dioxetane intermediate without CO-loss. The reaction is specific base-catalyzed and the kinetic measurements resulted in the rate law ââ [PhquinH2]/â t=kOHâ [OHâ] [PhquinH2] [O2]. The rate constant, activation enthalpy, and entropy at 303.16 K are as follows: kOHâ=(2.42±0.03)Ã103molâ2L2sâ1; ÎGâ¡=73.13±4.02 kJ molâ1; ÎHâ¡=70.60±4.04 kJ molâ1; ÎSâ¡=â28±2 J molâ1 Kâ1. The reaction fits a Hammett linear free energy relationship for 4â²-substituted substrates, and electron-releasing groups make the oxygenation reaction faster (Ï=â0.258). The EPR spectrum of the reaction mixtures showed the presence of the organic radical 1H-2-phenyl-3-oxyl-4-oxoquinoline and superoxide ion due to single electron transfer from the carbanion to dioxygen. The pathway via 1,2-dioxetane could be proved by chemiluminescence measurements.
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