4.8 Article

Aqueous Microdroplets Capture Elusive Carbocations

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 143, Issue 6, Pages 2459-2463

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c12512

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Funding

  1. SERB, India [SB/S2/RJN-130/2017, ECR/2018/001268]

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The study demonstrates the effective capture and detection of short-lived carbocations using water microdroplets, outperforming organic microdroplets. By utilizing desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, various carbocations obtained from different reactions were analyzed.
Carbocations are short-lived reactive intermediates in many organic and biological reactions that are difficult to observe. This field sprung to life with the discovery by Olah that a superacidic solution allowed the successful capture and nuclear magnetic resonance characterization of transient carbocations. We report here that water microdroplets can directly capture the fleeting carbocation from a reaction aliquot followed by its desorption to the gas phase for mass spectrometric detection. This was accomplished by employing desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry to detect a variety of short-lived carbocations (average lifetime ranges from nanoseconds to picoseconds) obtained from different reactions (e.g., elimination, substitution, and oxidation). Solvent-dependent studies revealed that aqueous microdroplets outperform organic microdroplets in the capture of carbocations. We provide a mechanistic insight demonstrating the survival of the reactive carbocation in a positively charged aqueous microdroplet and its subsequent ejection to the gas phase for mass spectrometric analysis.

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