137-19-9Relevant articles and documents
Aqueous chlorination kinetics and mechanism of substituted dihydroxybenzenes
Rebenne, Laurence M.,Gonzalez, Alicia G.,Olson, Terese M.
, p. 2235 - 2242 (1996)
The initial chlorination kinetics of several substituted dihydroxybenzenes, including chlorinated resorcinol compounds, was studied over the pH range of 2-12 at 22 °C. For each of the resorcinol substrates, the apparent chlorination rates are a minimum in the pH range of 3-6 and a maximum at pH values between 8-11. A mechanism that involves the reaction of HOCl with ArX(OH)2, ArX(OH)O-, and ArX(O-)2, and an acid-catalyzed pathway at pH 2, ArX(OH)O-, and ArX(O-)2, and an acid-catalyzed pathway at pH 4 was proposed to explain this pH dependence. Over natural water pH conditions, the reactions of HOCl with the anion and dianion forms of resorcinol groups are the most important. Although the intrinsic reactivity of HOCl with resorcinol substrates decreases with the extent of chlorine substitution on aromatic ring, the apparent reactivity of HOCl increases for more chlorinated resorcinols. In the presence of excess HOCl, monochloro- and dichloro resorcinol intermediates, therefore, should not accumulate when resorcinol groups undergo chlorine substitution. Linear free energy relationships for the reactivity of HOCl with resorcinols and phenols were developed. The sequential chlorination kinetics of resorcinol up to trichlororesorcinol can now be modeled.
Photocatalytic degradation of lindane by polyoxometalates: Intermediates and mechanistic aspects
Antonaraki,Triantis,Papaconstantinou,Hiskia
experimental part, p. 119 - 124 (2010/08/22)
The photocatalytic degradation of lindane (γ-1,2,3,4,5,6-hexachlorocyclohexane) has been studied in the presence of the polyoxometalate PW12O403- in aqueous solutions. Lindane is fully decomposed to CO2, Cl- and H2O, while a great variety of intermediates has been detected using GC-MS, including aromatic compounds (dichlorophenol, trichlorophenols, tetrachlorophenol, hexachlorobenzene, di- and trichloro-benzenodiol), non-aromatic cyclic compounds (penta-, tetrachlorocyclohexene, heptachlorocyclohexane), aliphatic compounds (tetrachloroethane) and condensation products (polychlorinated biphenyls). The number and nature of the intermediates implies that the mechanism of decomposition of lindane is based on both oxidative and reductive processes. Common intermediates have been reported during photolysis of lindane in the presence of titanium dioxide. A similar overall mechanism of polyoxometalates and TiO2 photocatalysis through the formation of common reactive species is suggested.
Selective halogenation of aromatics by dimethyldioxirane and halogen ions
Bovicelli,Mincione,Antonioletti,Bernini,Colombari
, p. 2955 - 2963 (2007/10/03)
The oxidation of halogen anions by dimethyldioxirane (DMD) produced reactive species which led, in acidic media, to the halogenation of activated aromatic rings. The reaction can be efficiently controlled to obtain selective and mixed halogenated species.