AI Article Synopsis

  • Aqueous suspensions of nanocrystals of two related compounds, α-(ortho-tolyl)-acetophenone and α-(ortho-tolyl)-para-methylacetophenone, show strong absorption characteristics in flash photolysis experiments.
  • The solid state reactions reveal a rate-limiting hydrogen transfer with a short-lived intermediate, differing from solution behavior.
  • The study finds that the rate of hydrogen atom transfer is significantly faster in the first compound due to an electronic effect caused by a para-methyl group in the second compound, emphasizing the connection between crystal structure and reaction kinetics.

Article Abstract

Aqueous suspensions of nanocrystals in the 200-500 nm size range of isostructural α-(ortho-tolyl)-acetophenone (1a) and α-(ortho-tolyl)-para-methylacetophenone (1b) displayed good absorption characteristics for flash photolysis experiments in a flow system, with transient spectra and decay kinetics with a quality that is similar to that recorded in solution. In contrast to solution measurements, reactions in the solid state were characterized by a rate limiting hydrogen transfer reaction from the triplet excited state and a very short-lived biradical intermediate, which does not accumulate. Notably, the rate for δ-hydrogen atom transfer of 1a (2.7 × 10(7) s(-1)) in the crystalline phase is 18-fold larger than that of 1b (1.5 × 10(6) s(-1)). With nearly identical molecular and crystal structures, this decrease in the rate of δ-hydrogen abstraction can be assigned unambiguously to an electronic effect by the para-methyl group in 1b, which increases the contribution of the (3)π,π* configuration relative to the reactive (3)n,π* configuration in the lowest triplet excited state. These results highlight the potential of relating single crystal X-ray structural data with absolute kinetics from laser flash photolysis.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5b11657DOI Listing

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