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4-(α,α,α-Trifluoromethyl)nitrobenzene radical anion is a chemical with a specific purpose. Lookchem provides you with multiple data and supplier information of this chemical.

35848-46-5

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35848-46-5 Usage

Check Digit Verification of cas no

The CAS Registry Mumber 35848-46-5 includes 8 digits separated into 3 groups by hyphens. The first part of the number,starting from the left, has 5 digits, 3,5,8,4 and 8 respectively; the second part has 2 digits, 4 and 6 respectively.
Calculate Digit Verification of CAS Registry Number 35848-46:
(7*3)+(6*5)+(5*8)+(4*4)+(3*8)+(2*4)+(1*6)=145
145 % 10 = 5
So 35848-46-5 is a valid CAS Registry Number.

35848-46-5Downstream Products

35848-46-5Relevant academic research and scientific papers

Photocatalytic reduction of nitroorganics over illuminated titanium dioxide: Electron transfer between excited-state TiO2 and nitroaromatics

Ferry, John L.,Glaze, William H.

, p. 2239 - 2244 (1998)

The present study investigates the steady-state photocatalytic reduction of methyl viologen and a suite of monosubstituted nitrobenzenes. Reduction was carried out in deoxygenated, illuminated aqueous slurries of titanium dioxide (Degussa P25) in the presence of a sacrificial electron donor, 2-propanol. Langmuir-Hinshelwood plots were obtained for the reduction of each compound and found to be linear, with an average correlation of 0.98 and with a standard deviation on the correlations of 0.02. The concentration independent rates for nitroaromatic reduction obtained from these plots were normalized against the rate of methyl viologen reduction and the ratio was used to solve for the rate constant of nitroaromatic reduction, assuming a bimolecular model. The assumptions behind this procedure were tested by the use of the Marcus expression. Using the reorganization energy for the reaction as the fitting variable, it was possible to fit the measured rates to the predicted rates with a reorganization energy of 138 kJ/mol.

Resonance Electron Capture Rate Constants for Substituted Nitrobenzenes

Knighton, W. B.,Mock, R. S.,McGrew, D. S.,Grimsrud, E. P.

, p. 3770 - 3776 (2007/10/02)

We report here a new method for the determination of electron capture (EC) rate constants that utilizes a pulsed electron beam mass spectrometer.The method is first tested by measurements of the known dissociative electron capture rate constants for several halogenated methanes that have been extensively studied by other techniques.The resonance electron capture (REC) rate constants of nitrobenzene (NB) and 23 substituted nitrobenzenes (SNB's) are then determined for the first time at 125 deg C in 10 Torr of methane buffer gas.The SNB's studied here include several sets of closely related structural isomers whose electron affinities (EA's) have been previously determined.It is shown that the REC rate constants of these compounds bear little systematic relationship with the EA's of these compounds.The REC rate constants of the SNB's are also compared with other previously reported characteristics associated with the negative ionization of these compounds, including their entropies of negative ionization, the lifetimes against autodetachment of their initially formed molecular anions, and the rates of autodetachment from electronically excited states of their molecular anions.

One-Electron Reduction of Nitrobenzenes by α-Hydroxyalkyl Radicals via Addition/Elimination. An Example of an Organic Inner-Sphere Electron-Transfer Reaction

Jagannadham, V.,Steenken, S.

, p. 6542 - 6551 (2007/10/02)

The reaction in aqueous solution of α-hydroxyalkyl radicals with para-substituted nitrobenzenes were studied by using product analysis, electron spin resonance, and pulse radiolysis techniques.At neutral pH the α-hydroxyalkyl radicals are quantitatively oxidized to yield the corresponding ketones or aldehydes and H+, and the nitrobenzenes are reduced to the radical anions.The mechanism of this redox reaction depends strongly on the substituents on the α-hydroxyalkyl radical (the electron donor) and on the nitrobenzene (the electron acceptor).In case of α-hydroxymethyl radical, the reaction proceeds by addition to the nitro group to produce an alkoxynitroxyl radical which can undergo an OH--catalyzed heterolysis to give formaldehyde and the radical anion of the nitrobenzene.With the α-hydroxyethyl radical, both addition and "electron transfer" take place, the fraction of electron transfer increasing with increasing electron-withdrawing power of the substituent.The nitroxyl-type adducts undergo a spontaneous unimolecular heterolysis to give acetaldehyde, H+, and nitrobenzene radical anion.The rate constants ks (from 2 to 5*104 s-1) for this heterolysis increase with increasing electron-withdrawing strength of the substituent if it is on the benzene, and they decrease if the substituent is on the methyl carbon of the nitroxyl.The heterolysis reaction is characterized by low (5-10 kcal/mol) activation enthalpies and strongly negative (-5 to -25 eu) activation entropies, which originate from hydration of a proton in the transition state.From the effect on the activation parameters exerted by substituents on the electron acceptor and on the electron donor parts of the nitroxyl radical it is concluded that the heterolysis reaction proceeds by a push-pull mechanism and is entropy controlled.In the α-hydroxyprop-2-yl radical with substituted nitrobenzenes, the lifetimes of potential adducts of the nitroxyl type are s=2.1*103 s-1.The heterolysis reaction can also be slowed down by making the solvent less polar than water: in 95percent propan-2-ol/5percent water ks=1.5*104 s-1 for R=CN as compared to >106 s-1 in water.

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