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Citation
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HERO ID
1179840
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Mechanistic studies of the azomethine ylide-forming photoreactions of N-(silylmethyl)phthalimides and N-phthaloylglycine
Author(s)
Takahashi, Y; Miyashi, T; Yoon, UC; Oh, SW; Mancheno, M; Su, ZY; Falvey, DF; Mariano, PS
Year
1999
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Journal of the American Chemical Society
ISSN:
0002-7863
EISSN:
1520-5126
Volume
121
Issue
16
Page Numbers
3926-3932
DOI
10.1021/ja9841862
Web of Science Id
WOS:000080181100012
URL
http://
://WOS:000080181100012
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Abstract
In earlier studies we have shown that irradiation of MeCN solutions of N- [(trimethylsilyl)methyl]phthalimide and N-phthaloylglycine in the presence of electron-defecient olefins (e.g., methyl acrylate) results in the production of cycloadducts. In addition, irradiation of these substances in aqueous MeCN leads to formation of N-methylphthalimide. Laser flash photolysis and fluorescence spectroscopy have now been employed to investigate the mechanistic details of these novel excited-state processes. The results of this effort show that azomethine ylides are the key reactive intermediates in these processes. In addition, the investigations provide information about the dynamics of several ylide decay pathways and the nature of the excited states responsible for the ylide-forming silyl-migration (singlet and tripler) and decarboxylation (triplet) reactions. Pulsed irradiations of MeCN solutions of N-[(trimethylsilyl)methyl]phthalimide (1) and N-phthaloylglycine (2) give rise to transients whose absorption and decay properties are consistent with their assignment as azomethine ylides. Kinetic analysis of the decay of the ylides in the presence of dipolarophiles, methyl acrylate and acrylonitrile, provides the rates of the dipolar cycloaddition reactions. Reactions of methyl acrylate with, the ylides produced by pulsed irradiation of N-[(trimethylsilyl)methyl]phthalimide (1) and N-phthaloylglycine (2) occur with respective bimolecular rate constants of 8.9 x 10(6) and 2.7 x 10(7) M-1 s(-1). Methanol promotes the decay of the N-[(trimethylsilyl)methyl]phthalimide-derived by a process which is second order in MeOH and has a kinetic OD-isotope effect of 4.3. In contrast, quenching of this ylide by acetic acid is first order in AcOH. The results suggest that the mechanism for MeOH-promoted decay involves initial and reversible formation of a silylate complex via nucleophilic addition of MeOH to the ylide. This is then followed:by rate-limiting proton transfer from MeOH to the carbanionic center in the silylate complex either in concert wither preceding desilylation. The mechanism for AcOH-induced ylide decay has these steps reversed; i.e., rate-limiting proton transfer precedes AcOH-induced desilylation. Also, MeOH catalyzes the decay of the ylide derived by irradiation of N-phthaloylglycine by a process which is first order in MeOH and has a kinetic OD-isotope effect of 1.5. Finally, the observations (1) of complete loss of fluorescence of the 1,8- and 2,3-naphthalimide chromophores upon changing the N-substituent from methyl to (trimethylsilyl)methyl and (2) that ylide formation from 1 can be xanthone tripler sensitized suggest that the ylide-forming, silyl-transfer reactions of the (silylmethyl)phthalimides can occur in both the singlet and tripler excited-state manifolds.
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Methanol (Non-Cancer)
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