Neutralization-Reionization of alkenylammonium cations: An experimental and ab initio study of intramolecular N-H … C=C interactions in cations and hypervalent ammonium radicals

Autor: Shaffer, Scott A., Wolken, Jill K., Turecek, František
Zdroj: Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry; November 1997, Vol. 8 Issue: 11 p1111-1123, 13p
Abstrakt: A series of isomeric hexenylammonium and hexenyldimethylammonium cations were neutralized by collisional electron transfer in the gas phase in an attempt to generate hypervalent ammonium radicals. The radicals dissociated completely on the 4.8–5.4 µstime scale. Radicals in which the hexene double bond was in the 3-, 4-, and 5-positions dissociated by competitive N-H and N=C bond cleavages. Allylic 2-hexen-1-ylammonium and 2-hexen-1-yldimethylammonium radicals underwent predominant cleavages of allylic N-C bonds. Deuterium labeling experiments revealed no intramolecular hydrogen transfer from the hypervalent ammonium group to the hexene double bond. Ab initio and density functional theory calculations showed that alkenylammonium and alkenylmethyloxonium ions preferred hydrogen bonded structures in the gas phase. The stabilization through intramolecular H bonding in 3-buten-1-ylammonium and 3-buten-1-yl methyloxonium ions was calculated by B3LYP/6-311G(2d,p) at 26 and 18 kJ mol-1, respectively. No intramolecular hydrogen bonding was found for the allylammonium ion. The hypervalent 3-buten-1-yl-methyloxonium radical was calculated to be unbound and predicted to dissociate exothermically by O-H bond cleavage. This dissociation may provide kinetic energy for the hydrogen atom to overcome a small energy barrier for exothermic addition to the double bond. The 3-butten-1-ylammonium and allylammonium radicals were found to be bound and preferred gauche conformations without intramolecular hydrogen bonding. Vertical neutralization of alkenylammonium ions was accompanied by small Franck-Condon effects. The failure to detect stable or metastable hypervalent alkenylammonium radicals was ascribed to the low activation barriers to exothermic dissociations by N-H and N-C bond cleavages.
Databáze: Supplemental Index