Ozonolysis of vinyl compounds, CH2CH–X, in aqueous solution—the chemistries of the ensuing formyl compounds and hydroperoxides

Literature Information

Publication Date 2003-02-19
DOI 10.1039/B212194H
Impact Factor 3.876
Authors

Jacob A. Theruvathu


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Abstract

Reactions of ozone with some vinyl compounds of the general structure CH2CH–X were studied in aqueous solution. Rate constants (in brackets, unit: dm3 mol−1 s−1) were determined: acrylonitrile (670), vinyl acetate (1.6 × 105), vinylsulfonic acid (anion, 8.3 × 103), vinyl phenylsulfonate (ca. 200), vinyl diethylphosphonate (3.3 × 103), vinylphosphonic acid (acid, 1 × 104; mono-anion, 2.7 × 104; di-anion, 1 × 105), vinyl bromide (1 × 104). The main pathway leads to the formation of HOOCH2OH and HC(O)X. As measured by stopped flow with conductometric detection, the latter one may undergo rapid hydrolysis by water, e.g.HC(O)CN (3 s−1). Other HC(O)X hydrolyse much slower, e.g.HC(O)PO3(Et)2 (7 × 10−3s−1) and HC(O)P(OH)O2− (too slow to be measured). The OH−-induced hydrolyses range from ca. 5 dm3 mol−1 s−1 [HC(O)PO32−] to 3.8 × 105 dm3 mol−1 s−1 [HC(O)CN]. HC(O)Br mainly decomposes rapidly (too fast for the determination of the rate) into CO and Br− plus H+, and the competing hydrolysis is of minor importance (3.7%). The slow hydrolysis of HC(O)PO32− at pH 10.2, where HOOCH2OH is rapidly decomposed into CH2O plus H2O2, allows an H2O2-induced decomposition (k = 260 dm3 mol−1 s−1) to take place. Formate and phosphate are the final products.

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Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry

Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry
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