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A Solvolysis Model for 2-Chloro-2-methyladamantane Based on the Linear Solvation Energy Approach

Authors :
Samuel P. McManus
Sunil Somani
J. Milton Harris
R. Andrew McGill
Source :
The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 69:8865-8873
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2004.

Abstract

Solvolysis/dehydrohalogenation rates of 2-chloro-2-methyladamantane (CMA) in 15 hydrogen-bond acidic and/or basic solvents are studied. The rates of reaction in these solvents have been correlated with the solvation equation developed by Kamlet, Abraham, and Taft. The linear solvation energy relationship (LSER) derived from this study is given by the following equation: log k = -5.409 + 2.219 + 2.505alpha(1) - 1.823beta(1) where , alpha(1), and beta(1) are the solvation parameters that measure the solvent dipolarity/polarizability, hydrogen-bond acidity (electrophilicity), and hydrogen-bond basicity (nucleophilicity). A high correlation coefficient (r = 0.996, SD = 0.191) was achieved. The cavity term, which includes the Hildebrand parameter for solvent cohesive energy density, delta(H), was not found to be statistically significant for this reaction substrate. The resulting equation allows calculated rates of reaction in other solvents and provides insight into the reaction pathway. In a previously reported correlation for another tertiary chloride, tert-butyl chloride (TBC), the coefficients for alpha(1) and are significantly larger and the coefficient for is statistically significant. In addition, the coefficient for beta(1) in the TBC correlation is positive, rather than negative, indicating that the transition states for TBC and CMA are significantly different. These results demonstrate why the uses of simple solvolytic correlation methods may be invalid even for comparisons of similar type substrates, e.g., tertiary chlorides. Also, these results provide confidence in the use of multiple linear regression analysis for predicting solvolytic rates in additional solvents.

Details

ISSN :
15206904 and 00223263
Volume :
69
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Organic Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c0a184acca365d2456133bb25db1dadc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/jo049798l