Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7606212 | Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry | 2007 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
A novel gas-phase electrophilic cyclization, initiated by the protonation of a nitro group, occurs for 2-nitrophenyl phenyl ether and for the analogous sulfide and amine, leading to heterocyclic intermediates in each case. Subsequently, the cyclic intermediates dissociate via two pathways: (1) unusual step-wise eliminations of two OH radicals to afford heterocyclic cations, [phenoxazine â H]+, [phenothiazine â H]+, and [phenazine + H]+, and (2) expulsion of H2O, to yield a heterocyclic ketone, followed by loss of CO. The proposed structures of the gas-phase product ions and reaction mechanisms are supported by chemical substitution, deuterium labeling, accurate mass measurements at high mass resolving power, product-ion mass spectra obtained by tandem mass spectrometry, mass spectra of reference compounds, and molecular orbital calculations. Using a mass spectrometer as a reaction vessel, we demonstrate that, upon protonation, a nitro group becomes an electrophile and participates in cyclization reactions in the gas phase.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Joseph T. Moolayil, Mathai George, R. Srinivas, Daryl Giblin, Amber Russell, Michael L. Gross,