Title: Reactions Involving Free Radicals
1Reactions Involving Free Radicals
2Free radical reactions involve one electron
species, frequently generated by homolysis (shown
below). Note the use of an arrow with a half
head to designate the movement of one electron.
Weak bonds, like O-O bonds and X-X bonds undergo
such homolysis reactions relatively easily.
3Hydroxy radicals (HO.) and hydrogen radicals (H.)
are relatively unstable.
4However, radicals can be stabilized by resonance,
and shielded from reaction by steric hindrance,
sometimes resulting in long-lived radicals.
BHT, above, is sometimes added as a food
preservative, to prevent the process of auto
oxidation, that occurs in the presence of air and
light. Once it reacts with a peroxy radical
(above) it transfers a hydrogen atom to produce a
resonance-stabilized, hindered oxygen radical,
which does not react further.
5Another Stable Free Radical TEMPO (2,2,6,6-tetram
ethylpiperidine-1-oxyl)
6TEMPO is available commercially, but expensive
7TEMPO is often used catalytically, together with
stoichiometric amounts of inexpensive oxidants,
to oxidize alcohols to aldehydes and ketones.
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10The mechanism of this reaction involves oxidation
of the N-O bond to an NO bond by the secondary
stoichiometric oxidant, which undergoes addition
of the alcohol, as shown below.
11TEMPO is also used to initiate controlled radical
polymerization reactions
12Geometry of Carbocation, Radical, and Carbanion
13Radical reactions can be divided into three
steps 1) Initiation 2) Propagation 3)
Termination
14Weaker bonds are more readily cleaved by homolysis
15Some bonds can be cleaved by heating
16Radical Initiators
AIBN
Link
Benzoyl Peroxide
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18One common reaction of radicals is an atom
abstraction, with a hydrogen atom being one of
the most commonly abstracted atoms (note this
process does NOT involve a hydrogen radical).
19Radical Bromination
20Link
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22Allylic (and benzylic) bromination with NBS
(N-Bromosuccinimide)
23NBS is regarded as a source of trace amounts of
Br2 via the mechanism shown below.
24Note that the free-radical bromination occurs at
the benzylic (and allylic) positions, through
resonance-stabilized radical species.
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27Reductions utilizing tributyltin hydride as a
hydrogen atom donor
The Sn-H bond is relatively weak (82 kcal/mole),
relative to the C-H bond (99 kcal/mole) By
contrast, tin forms stronger bonds to bromine,
iodine, and sulfur than does carbon.
Sn-S 111 kcal Sn-Br 132 Kcal Sn-I 56
kcal Sn-H 82 kcal
C-S 65 kcal C-Br 68 kcal C-I 51 kcal C-H 99
kcal
28The use of TRIBUTYLtin derivatives has become
relatively common. The three butyl groups add
molecular weight to the tin and thus lower its
vapor pressure. (Tin compounds can be toxic by
inhalation.)
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32While a clean, high-yielding reduction of an
alkyl halide is synthetically useful, it would be
even more useful if there existed a method for
reducing an alcohol to an alkane.
33The Barton-McCombie Deoxygenation
34Mechanism
Notice that the tin radical attacks the sulfur to
generate the highly stabilized tertiary radical.
(This is unlike the addition of nucleophiles to
the CO, which always occurred at the carbonyl
carbon, due to the polarized nature of the
carbonyl group.)
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39Obviously the hydrogen atom is transferred from
tin to carbon relatively easily. Can other alkyl
groups be transferred from tin to carbon (by a
free-radical process)?
40Radical Reaction with Allyltributylstannane
One alkyl group that transfers (from tin to
carbon) well is the allyl group, as shown below.
41Mechanism of reaction of allyltributyltin with
alkyl halides
(Notice that another common reaction of free
radicals is addition to a CC.)
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43The Barton Decarboxylation
44In the Case of a (non-radical) Decarboxylation
,Recall that
Decarboxylation produce CO2, and are thus
thermodynamically favorable. These reactions
proceed most readily when the COOH moiety is
attached to an electronegative atom, like oxygen
or nitrogen.
Unstabilized Carbanion is NOT formed
45However, even in the case of simple carboxylic
acid, decarboxylation may proceed readily, if the
resultant carbanion is stabilized by resonance,
or other electronegative substituent, as shown
for acetoacetic acid below.
Stabilized (enolate) carbanion is formed
The reaction probably proceeds through a cyclic
transition state as shown below.
46Carboxyl RADICALS, however, decarboxylate much
more readily than the corresponding acids and
carboxylate salts.
47An early decarboxylation utilizing this fact was
the Hunsdiecker reaction, shown below
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49Mechanism of the Hunsdiecker Reaction
50Derek Barton developed a more reliable procedure
for decarboxylation which does not employ the use
of Br2.
51Mechanism of the Barton Decarboxylation
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57Addition of radicals to double bonds
58Under certain conditions, addition of H-Br (but
not H-Cl or H-I) gives anti-Markovnikov
regiochemistry Why?
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61Benzoyl Peroxide
Ascaridole
62Morris S. Kharasch
LINK
63Mechanistic Reason for Effect of Peroxides on the
Regiochemistry of Addition of H-Br to the alkene
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65Free Radical Polymerization Link