Nucleophilic substitution reactions of microsolvated hydroperoxide anion HOO(NH3)n with methyl chloride and comparison between ammonia and water as the solvent

Yang Hu, Xiangyu Wu, Jing Xie*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Similar to microhydrated hydroperoxide anion HOO(H2O)n, the HOO(NH3)n=1-3 anion can induce alternative nucleophiles by proton transfer (PT) from the solvent molecule NH3. The PT-induced species NH2(H2O2)(NH3)n−1 is higher in energy than HOO(NH3)n, obeying the proton affinity (PA) prediction that HOO has a higher PA than NH2. The potential energy profile of HOO(NH3)n reacting with CH3Cl shows that the transition states of the traditional HOO-SN2 pathway are ∼10 kcal mol−1 lower in energy than those of the PT-induced NH2-SN2 pathway, indicating the latter path is unlikely to compete. The differential solvation energy for reactants and transition states with incremental solvation increases the barrier height of both HOO-/NH2-SN2 pathways and makes the transition structures more product-like. For HOO(sol)n + CH3Cl → CH3OOH + Cl(sol)n reactions, the barrier heights for sol = H2O are higher than those for sol = NH3, because H2O is more polar than NH3, and the electrostatic interaction is strengthened, hence H2O molecules stabilize the microsolvated nucleophiles more. In addition, because the H2O molecule is a better proton donor than the NH3 molecule, the PT-induced HOSN2 pathway is more likely to compete with the HOOSN2 pathway. The HOMO level of nucleophiles, which negatively correlates with the SN2 barrier heights, is found to be a good descriptor to predict the SN2 barrier height of a microsolvated system with the same attacking nucleophile. This work adds to our understanding of the differential solvent effect on the prototype ion-molecule SN2 reactions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1947-1956
Number of pages10
JournalPhysical Chemistry Chemical Physics
Volume25
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 8 Dec 2022

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