- Silanones and silanethiones from the reactions of transient silylenes with oxiranes and thiiranes in solution. The direct detection of diphenylsilanethione
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The transient silylenes SiMe2 and SiPh2 react with cyclohexene oxide (CHO), propylene oxide (PrO), and propylene sulfide (PrS) in hydrocarbon solvents to form products consistent with the formation of the corresponding transient silanones and silanethiones, respectively. Laser flash photolysis studies show that these reactions proceed via multistep sequences involving the intermediacy of the corresponding silylene-oxirane or -thiirane complexes, which are formed with rate constants close to the diffusion limit in all cases and exhibit UV absorption spectra similar to those of the corresponding complexes with the nonreactive O- and S-donors, tetrahydrofuran and tetrahydrothiophene. The SiMe2-PrO and SiPh2-PrO complexes both exhibit lifetimes of ca. 300 ns, and are longer-lived than the corresponding complexes with CHO, which are both in the range of 230-240 ns. On the other hand, the silylene-PrS complexes are considerably shorter-lived and vary with silyl substituent; the SiMe2-PrS complex decays with the excitation laser pulse (i.e., τ ≥ 25 ns), while the SiPh2-PrS complex exhibits τ = 48 ± 3 ns. The decay of the SiPh2-PrS complex affords a long-lived transient product exhibiting λ max ≈ 275 nm, which has been assigned to diphenylsilanethione (Ph2Si=S) on the basis of its second order decay kinetics and absolute rate constants for reaction with methanol, tert-butanol, acetic acid, and n-butyl amine, for which values in the range of 1.4 × 108 to 3.2 × 109 M-1 s-1 are reported. The experimental rate constants for decay of the SiMe2-epoxide and -PrS complexes indicate free energy barriers (ΔG?) of ca. 8.5 and ≥7.1 kcal mol-1 for the rate-determining steps leading to dimethylsilanone and -silanethione, respectively, which are compared to the results of DFT (B3LYP/6-311+G(d,p)) calculations of the reactions of SiH 2 and SiMe2 with oxirane and thiirane. The calculations predict a stepwise C-O cleavage mechanism involving singlet biradical intermediates for the silylene-oxirane complexes, and a concerted mechanism for silanethione formation from the silylene-thiirane complexes, in agreement with earlier ab initio studies of the SiH2-oxirane and -thiirane systems.
- Kostina, Svetlana S.,Leigh, William J.
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supporting information; experimental part
p. 4377 - 4388
(2011/06/11)
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- Phototransformation of perchlorate to chloride in the presence of polysilanes
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Perchlorate is a uniquely stable chemical described as an emerging thyroid disrupting agent that is presently detected in several terrestrial and aquatic matrices. The present study was undertaken to deoxygenate perchlorate to the chloride anion photolytically in the presence of dodecamethylcyclohexasilane (Me2Si)6 1. It is found that photolysis of 1 in the presence of dry NaClO4 in tetrahydrofuran (THF) at 254 nm leads to the disappearance of the salt. The removal of ClO4? occurred with the concurrent formation of ClO3? and ClO2?, which disappear to eventually produce the chloride anion quantitatively. The two cyclic silanes (Me2Si)5 3 and (Me2Si)4 4 in addition to several other siloxanes that include (Me2SiO)3, (Me2SiO)4, and (Me2Si)xO2 (x ≤ 4 and 5) were also detected. When the reaction was repeated using uniformly labelled 18O- [ClO4?] it was found that oxygen incorporated in the siloxane products was derived from perchlorate. Mixing 1 with perchlorate in THF in the dark or adding the salt to 1 after the latter being photolyzed in THF did not deoxygenate ClO4?. Based on experimental evidence gathered thus far it is concluded that dimethylsilylene, Me2Si: 2, a reactive intermediate produced by the photolysis of 1, is in part responsible for the deoxygenation of perchlorate. Direct oxygen transfer from ClO 4? to the silanes during photolysis is also suggested as a potential route of deoxygenating ClO4?. CSIRO 2007.
- Lazar, Carmen,Halasz, Annamaria,Beaulieu, Chantale,Thiboutot, Sonia,Ampleman, Guy,Hawari, Jalal
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p. 857 - 861
(2008/09/19)
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