JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Electronic and Torsional Effects on Hydrogen Atom Transfer from Aliphatic C-H Bonds: A Kinetic Evaluation via Reaction with the Cumyloxyl Radical.

A kinetic study on the hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) reactions from the aliphatic C-H bonds of a series of 1-Z-pentyl, 1-Z-propyl, and Z-cyclohexyl derivatives and of a series of N-alkylamides and N-alkylphthalimides to the electrophilic cumyloxyl radical (CumO• ) has been carried out. With 1-pentyl and 1-propyl derivatives, α-CH2 activation toward CumO• is observed for Z = Ph, OH, NH2 , and NHAc, as evidenced by an increase in kH as compared to the unsubstituted alkane substrate. A decrease in kH has been instead measured for Z = OAc, NPhth, CO2 Me, Cl, Br, and CN, indicative of α-CH2 deactivation with HAT that predominantly occurs from the most remote methylenic site. With cyclohexyl derivatives, α-CH activation is only observed for Z = OH and NH2 , indicative of torsional effects as an important contributor in governing the functionalization selectivity of monosubstituted cyclohexanes. In the reactions of N-alkylamides and N-alkylphthalimides with CumO• , the reactivity and selectivity patterns parallel those observed in the oxidation of the same substrates with H2 O2 catalyzed by manganese complexes, supporting the hypothesis that both reactions proceed through a common HAT mechanism. The implications of these findings and the potential of electronic, stereoelectronic, and torsional effects as tools to implement selectivity in C-H oxidation reactions are briefly discussed.

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