4.8 Article

Substituent effects on the bond dissociation enthalpies of aromatic amines

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 124, Issue 37, Pages 11085-11092

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja026289x

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Bond dissociation enthalpy differences, Z-X DeltaBDE = BDE(4-YC(6)H(4)Z-X) - BDE(C(6)H(5)Z-X), for Z = CH2 and O are largely independent of X and are determined mainly by the stabilization/destabilization effect of Y on the 4-YC(6)H(4)Z(.) radicals. The effects of Y are small (less than or equal to2 kcal/mol for all Y) for Z = CH2, but they are large for Z = 0, where good correlations with sigma(rho)(+)(Y) yield rho(+) = 6.5 kcal/mol. For Z = NH, two sets of electrochemically measured N-H DeltaBDEs correlate with sigma(rho)(+)(Y), yielding rho(+) = 3.9 and 3.0 kcal/mol. However, in contrast to the situation with phenols, these data indicate that the strengthening effect on N-H BDEs of electron-withdrawing (EW) Y's is greater than the weakening effect of electron-donating (ED) Y's. Attempts to measure N-H ABIDES in anilines using two nonelectrochemical techniques were unsuccessful; therefore, we turned to density functional theory. Calculations on 15-4-YC6H4NH2 gave N-H ABIDES correlating with sigma(rho)(+) (rho(+) = 4.6 kcal/mol) and indicated that EW and ED Y's had comparable strengthening and weakening effects, respectively, on the N-H bonds. To validate theory by connecting it to experiment, the N-H ABIDES of four 4,4'-disubstituted diphenylamines and five 3,7-disubstituted phenothiazines were both calculated and measured by the radical equilibration EPR technique. For all compounds, theory and experiment agreed to better than 1 kcal/mol. Dissection of N-H DeltaBDEs in 4-substituted anilines and O-H DeltaBDEs in 4-substituted phenols into interaction enthalpies between Y and NH2/OH (molecule stabilization/destabilization enthalpy, MSE) and NH./O-. (radical stabilization/destabilization enthalpy, RSE) reveals that for both groups of compounds, ED Y's destabilize the molecule and stabilize the radical, while the opposite holds true for EW Y's. However, in the phenols the effects of substituents on the radical are roughly 3 times as great as those in the molecule, whereas in the anilines the two effects are of comparable magnitudes. These differences arise from the stronger ED character of NH2 VS OH and the weaker EW character of NH. vs O-.. The relatively large contributions to N-H BDEs in anilines arising from interactions in the molecules suggested that N-X DeltaBDEs in 4-YC6H4NH-X would depend on X, in contrast to the lack of effect of X on O-X and CH2-X DeltaBDEs in 4-YC6H4O-X and 4-YC6H4CH2-X. This suggestion was confirmed for X = CH3, H, OH, and F, for which the calculated NH-X DeltaBDEs yielded rho(+) = 5.0, 4.6, 4.0, and 3.0 kcal/mol, respectively.

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