Physical Organic Chemistry

Physical Organic Chemistry

CHM 8304 Physical Organic Chemistry Thermodynamics and kinetics Outline: Isotope effects • see section 8.1 of A&D – experimental approach – primary isotope effect – secondary isotope effect – equilibrium isotope effect – solvent isotope effect – heavy atom isotope effects 2 Thermodynamics and kinetics 1 CHM 8304 Measurement of an isotope effect • performed to determine if a bond changes in a certain way during the rate-limiting step • expressed as a ratio whose numerator is the rate constant measured for the naturally abundant isotope and the denominator is the rate constant measured for the varied isotope – e.g. kH/kD 3 Types of isotope effects • kinetic isotope effects (kie): result from a change in the rate constant of a reaction : – normal effect: ratio > 1 – inverse effect: ratio < 1 – primary isotope effect: when the isotopically substituted bond is cleaved during the rate-limiting step – secondary isotope effect : attributable to a change of hybridation state, not cleavage of bonds • equilibrium isotope effects: result from displacement of an equilibrium 4 Thermodynamics and kinetics 2 CHM 8304 Origin of isotope effects • the origin of all isotope effects is a difference in the frequency of vibrational modes of a substituted molecule with respect to an unsubstituted molecule • it is these vibrational modes that principally affect the shape of the potential energy well on an energy surface 5 Zero point energy • zero point energy (ZPE) is the energy level of the vibrational ground state for most molecules at ambient temperature • the vibrational frequencies of C-D bonds are lower than those of C-H bonds, due to a the mass difference – therefore, a C-D bond is stronger and more difficult to cleave: C-DC-H 0 BDEH BDED Potential energy Potential Interatomic Distance 6 Thermodynamics and kinetics 3 CHM 8304 Primary isotope effects • in general, bonds involving heavier isotopes are more stable and more difficult to break • the cleavage of a C-D bond can be several fold slower than the cleavage of a C-H bond • the degree of cleavage of the the bond at the transition state is given by the ratio: ⎛ kH ⎞ ⎜ ⎟ ⎝ kD ⎠ 7 Values of primary isotope effects • the magnitude depends on the relative mass difference between the two isotopes – e.g. H vs D, 12C vs 13C, 14N vs 15N, etc • maximum normal values at 25 °C : – H vs D : 6.4 (typically 2-7) – H vs T : 13 – 12C vs 13C : 1.04 – 14N vs 15N : 1.03 • the value observed experimentally is related to the degree and the linearity of cleavage realised at the TS of the rds – 50% transfer, at 180°, gives the maximum effect 8 Thermodynamics and kinetics 4 CHM 8304 Energy surfaces and isotope effects • a transition state is found at the col of an energy surface • the shape of the col is determined by the potential energy wells – these, in turn, are determined by the vibrational states projection in 2D energy rxn. coord. 9 Differences of ZPE • the magnitude of a primary isotope effect is related to the difference in activation energy of the two reactants – this difference is based on the relative difference of the ZPEs of the reactants and the activated complexes : ΔZPETS G‡ ‡ Δ C-H ΔG C-D ‡ ΔΔG CH/CD = ΔZPEreactant – ΔZPETS Potential energy ΔZPEreactant rxn. co-ord. 10 Thermodynamics and kinetics 5 CHM 8304 Vibrational modes • one particular vibrational mode determines the reaction coordinate for the transfer of a proton: A H B • whereas other vibrational modes have little to do with the isotope effect : A H B • and one mode is characteristic of the activated complex: A H B 11 Exothermicity and endothermicity • the equilibrium constant for a proton transfer affects the magnitude of the isotope effect: – for an exothermic equilibrium, the transition state resembles the reactant, A-H ‡ – little cleavage is achieved at the TS, so little difference of ΔG ZPE symmetric stretching ‡ Δ TS resembles that of A-H bond; ΔG C-D ‡ ΔG C-H as much ΔZPE at TS than in reactant ΔZPEreactant energy Potnetial Rxn. co-ord. 12 Thermodynamics and kinetics 6 CHM 8304 Exothermicity and endothermicity • the equilibrium constant for a proton transfer affects the magnitude of the isotope effect: – for an exothermic equilibrium, the transition state resembles the product, B-H – B-H almost completely formed, little difference de ΔG‡ ZPE symmetric stretching Δ TS resembles that of B-H bond; as much ΔZPE at TS as ΔG‡ in product and reactant ‡ C-H (for similar bonds) ΔG C-D Potential energy ΔZPEreactant Rxn. co-ord. 13 Exothermicity and endothermicity • the equilibrium constant for a proton transfer affects the magnitude of the isotope effect: – for an isothermal equilibrium, the transition state resembles the reactant as little as it resembles the product ‡ – little difference in ZPETS, so large ΔΔG CH/CD ZPE symmetric stretching does not Δ TS involve movement of H/D, so little ΔZPE at TS ‡ ‡ ΔG C-D ΔG C-H Potential energy ΔZPEreactant Rxn. co-ord.. 14 Thermodynamics and kinetics 7 CHM 8304 Non-linear transition states • for non-linear proton transfers, the bending vibrational modes are more important and even symmetrical stretching implies movement of H/D: H A B • therefore, there will be as much ΔZPE at the TS as in the reactant, and ‡ little ΔΔG CH/CD 15 Secondary isotope effects • result from the cleavage of bonds adjacent to the substituted atoms • caused by a change in hybridation of the atom bearing the isotope, rather than the cleavage of its bond – the change of hybridation of carbon from sp3 to sp2 is 14 % slower for every deuterium it bears, compared to hydrogen 16 Thermodynamics and kinetics 8 CHM 8304 Vibrations and 2° isotope effects • the most important vibrational mode is the out of plane bending : H sp3 H vs sp2 1350 cm-1 800 cm-1 – there is less steric hindrance for out of plane bending on a sp2 carbon • this vibrational mode is therefore subject to a secondary isotope effect 17 Change of hybridation • a change of hybridation from sp3 to sp2 manifests itself as a normal secondary sotope effect: potential energy well of activated complex ZPE having character between Δ TS sp3 and sp2 ‡ ΔG C-H ‡ ΔG C-D Potential energy sp2 ΔZPEreactant sp3 Rxn. co-ord. 18 Thermodynamics and kinetics 9 CHM 8304 Change of hybridation • a change of hybridation from sp2 to sp3 manifests itself as an inverse secondary isotope effect: potential energy well for an activated complex ZPE having character Δ TS between sp3 and sp2 ‡ ΔG C-D ‡ ΔG C-H ΔZPEreactant Potential energy sp2 sp3 Rxn. co-ord. 19 Equilibrium isotope effects • an equilibrium involving a change of hybridation or bond strength can show a secondary isotope effect, depending on differences in ZPE: ΔZPEproduct Potential energy ΔG°C-H ΔG°C-D G° < G° ; ΔZPEreactant Δ C-H Δ C-D reactants favoured more for deuterated compound Rxn. co-ord. 20 Thermodynamics and kinetics 10 CHM 8304 Equilibrium isotope effects • an equilibrium involving a change of hybridation or bond strength can show a secondary isotope effect, depending on differences in ZPE: ΔZPEproduct Potential energy ΔG° C-H ΔG° C-D ΔG°C-H > ΔG°C-D ; ΔZPEreactant products favoured more for deuterated compound Rxn. co-ord. 21 Solvent isotope effects • measured by comparing the rate of a reaction in H2O with that of the same reaction in D2O • result from proton transfers between electronegative atoms that accompany the formation and/or cleavage of bonds at the rds – especially if a water molecule is involved in the mechanism! – also include primary isotope effects of molecules that exchange protons 22 Thermodynamics and kinetics 11 CHM 8304 Fractionation factors • the exchange of protons/deuterons can be subject to an equilibrium isotope effect – often observed when donor and acceptor atoms are different – e.g. N-H vs O-H • a fractionation factor, φ, is measured to determine which atom prefers the H or D : – consider the solvent exchange equilibrium: X H + S D X D + S H [X-D] for φ>1, D prefers X [S-H][X-D] X-H K = φ = = [ ] eq [S-D][X-H] [S-D] for φ<1, D prefers solvent [S-H] 23 Values of φ Bond φ RO-L 1.0 • note: – L = H or D LO- 0.5 – typically, alcohols do not have a preference for H + RO-L2 0.69 or D – however, bonds with C, N and S prefer H R3C-L 0.69 R2N-L 0.92 + R3N-L 0.97 RS-L 0.42 • fractionation factors can be used to predict solvent isotope effects… …either equilibrium : or kinetic : prod prod e.t. e.t. Keq, D2O φi k φi = ∏i D2O = ∏i react react react react Keq, H2O φ kH2O φ ∏ j j ∏i i 24 Thermodynamics and kinetics 12 CHM 8304 Proton inventory • if a rate constant is measured as a function of the molar fraction (n) of D2O in H2O, the number of protons “in flight” at the TS can be determined – i.e.: kn = kH2O (1− n) + kD2O (n) = kH2O (1− n) +φkH2O (n) = kH2O (1− n + nφ) e.t. e.t. k (1− n + nφi ) n = ∏i often φ≈1, SO react react kH2O (1− n + nφ ) for N-L and O-L ∏i i k therefore n = (1− n + nφ e.t. )(1− n + nφ e.t. )(1− n + nφ e.t. )... k 1 2 3 H2O where each φ represents a fractionation factor for a proton in flight at the TS 25 Proton inventory • the plot of kn/kH2O vs n reveals the number of protons in flight – i.e., 1 = linear, 2 = quadratic, 3 = cubic InventaireProton inventory de proton 1 0.8 0.6 1 2 0.4 3 kn/kH2O 0.2 0 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0 n 26 Thermodynamics and kinetics 13 CHM 8304 Heavy atom isotope effects • typically very small (little relative mass difference) and difficult to measure – often, one measures, by NMR or MS, the proportion of an isotope in the product or in remaining reactant – e.g.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    45 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us