Flash Photolysis of 10-Diazo-9(10H)-phenanthrenone
J. Am. Chem. Soc., Vol. 119, No. 36, 1997 8419
these rate constants is considerably greater than its counterpart
for the hydration of the closely structurally related substance
2
-1
diphenylketene, 12, for which ko ) 2.75 × 10 s and kHO-
)
4
-1
-1 17b
6
.11 × 10
M
s .
This reactivity difference is a
consequence of the cyclopentadienyl nature of the central ring
in fluorenylideneketene, which takes on aromatic character when
it stabilizes the negative charge assumed by the substrate in
the transition state of the reaction, 13,as it undergoes nucleo-
Figure 1. Rate profiles for the hydration of fluorenylideneketene, 4,
and ketonization of the enol of fluorene-9-carboxylic acid, O, in aqueous
solution at 25 °C.
philic attack by a water molecule or hydroxide ion. Another
contributing factor is steric crowding of the benzene rings in
diphenylketene, which forces these substituents out of copla-
narity with the ketene group and reduces their ability to accept
negative charge.
slopes of buffer dilution plots, but buffer catalysis was weak,
and, although it appeared that the reaction involved only the
basic component of the buffer, the results were too uncertain
to allow detailed analysis. This is the expected result, for bases
are known to react with ketenes by direct nucleophilic attack
on the ketene carbonyl carbon atom, with the direction of
attack being in the ketene molecular plane:15 such attack in the
case of fluorenylideneketene will be hindered by steric interfer-
ence from hydrogens in the peri positions of the benzene rings
flanking the ketene group, and the buffer reaction will conse-
quently be weak.
The intercepts of these ammonium ion buffer solution plots,
on the other hand, were well defined, and they provide good
estimates of rates of ketene hydration through solvent-related
species in these solutions. They are displayed as triangles in
Figure 1, and, together with rate constants measured in all of
the other solutions, they provide the rate profile shown there.
Hydrogen ion concentrations needed for this purpose were
obtained by calculation using acidity constants from the literature
and activity coefficients recommended by Bates.16
Rates of hydration of fluorenylideneketene were also mea-
sured in D2O solutions of perchloric acid and in D2O solution
with no added acid or base. These data summarized in Tables
1
4
1
3
S1 and S3.
The observed rate constants determined in D2O solution
showed no systematic variation with acidity. They were
therefore simply averaged to give the result (ko)D O ) (7.92 (
2
4
-1
0
.12) × 10 s . Combination of this with its H2O counterpart
2 2
gives the isotope effect kH O/kD O ) 1.35 ( 0.03. The small
magnitude of this isotope effect is again typical of ketene
hydration reactions.
6
b,10,17b
It is also consistent with the
nucleophilic nature of this process, which involves no breaking
of isotopically substituted bonds but does include some weaken-
ing of the nonreacting bonds of the attacking water molecule
as it takes on positive charge in the transition state of the process,
1
9
eq 8.
It may be seen that this ketene hydration consists of a wide
region of uncatalyzed reaction, some, albeit weak, hydroxide
ion catalysis, and no acid catalysis. Such behavior is typical
of ketene hydrations, whose rate profiles commonly show large
5,6b-d,17
uncatalyzed regions and only weak acid and base catalysis.
Acid catalysis, moreover, is suppressed by aromatic substituents,
such as the fluorenyl residue present here, and in such systems
it can be detected only in concentrated acid solutions.
The rate law that corresponds to this behavior is shown in
eq 7, where ko is the rate constant for the uncatalyzed reaction
and kHO- is that for the hydroxide ion catalyzed process. Least
Enol Ketonization. Rates of the absorbance change at-
tributed to ketonization of the enol of fluorene-9-carboxylic acid
were measured in aqueous solutions of perchloric acid and
sodium hydroxide. Measurements were also made in aqueous
biphosphate ion and ammonium ion buffers using series of
solutions of constant buffer ratio but varying buffer concentra-
tion. The ionic strength of all solutions was maintained at 0.10
M using sodium perchlorate as required. The results obtained
1
7b,18
kobs ) k + k
[HO-]
HO
-
(7)
o
1
3
are summarized in Tables S5-S7.
squares fitting of this expression gave ko ) (1.07 ( 0.02) ×
0 s and kHO- ) (3.47 ( 0.10) × 10 M s . Each one of
5
-1
6
-1 -1
The rate constants determined in perchloric acid and sodium
hydroxide solutions, together with the intercepts of buffer
dilution plots, are also displayed as the rate profile defined by
circles in Figure 1. Hydrogen ion concentrations of the buffer
solutions needed to construct this rate profile were again
obtained by calculation using literature acidity constants and
1
(
14) Andraos, J.; Kresge, A. J. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1992, 114, 5643-
646.
15) Schiess, P.; Eberle, M.; Huys-Francotte, M.; Wirz, J. Tetrahedron
5
(
Lett. 1984, 25, 2201-2204. Seikaly, H. R.; Tidwell, T. T. Tetrahedron
1
986, 42, 2587-2613. Tidwell, T. T. Acc. Chem. Res. 1990, 23, 273-
2
79.
1
6
activity coefficients recommended by Bates.
(
16) Bates, R. G. Determination of pH Theory and Practice; Wiley: New
York, 1973, p 49.
17) (a) Bothe, E.; Dessouki, A. M.; Schulte-Frohlinde, D. J. Phys. Chem.
980, 84, 3270-3272. (b) Allen, A. D.; Kresge, A. J.; Schepp, N. P.;
Figure 1 shows that in neutral and basic solution the ketene
hydration and enol ketonization reactions were well separated
(
1
Tidwell, T. T. Can. J. Chem. 1987, 65, 1719-1723. (c) Allen, A. D.;
Tidwell, T. T. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1987, 109, 2774-2780. (d) Allen, A.
D.; Stevenson, A.; Tidwell, T. T. J. Org. Chem. 1989, 54, 2843-2848. (e)
Chiang, Y.; Kresge, A. J.; Popik, V. V. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1995, 117, 9165-
(18) (a) Allen, A. D.; Baigrie, L. M.; Gong, L.; Tidwell, T. T. Can. J.
Chem. 1991, 69, 138-145. (b) Andraos, J.; Kresge, A. J.; Schepp, N. P.
Can. J. Chem. 1995, 73, 539-543.
(19) Kresge, A. J.; More, O’Ferrall, R. A.; Powell, M. F. In Isotopes in
Organic Chemistry; Buncel, E., Lee, C. C., Eds.; Elsevier: Amsterdam,
1987; Vol. 7, pp 177-273.
9
171. Chiang, Y.; Guo, H.-X.; Kresge, A. J.; Tee, O. S. J. Am. Chem.
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