K. Bobrowski et al., MECHANISM OF THE CENTER-DOT-OH RADICAL-INDUCED DECARBOXYLATION OF 2-(ALKYLTHIO)ETHANOIC ACID-DERIVATIVES, Journal of physical chemistry, 97(51), 1993, pp. 13677-13684
The reactions of the hydroxyl radical with 2-(methylthio)ethanoic acid
and 2,2'-thiodiethanoic acid have been investigated in H2O and D2O. T
he initial step is a formation of an OH adduct at the sulfur moiety (a
bsorption maximum at lambda = 340 nm) with absolute rate constants of
k(OH+2-MTEA) = 8.7 X 10(9) M(-1) s(-1) and k(OH+2.2'-TDEA) = 9.1 X 10(
9) M(-1) s(-1). The subsequent decay pathways of these adducts strongl
y depend on pH but do not lead to the respective intermolecularly S th
erefore S-bonded dimeric radical cations even at high concentrations o
f solute (similar to 10(-2) M) and protons (similar to 10(-1) M). The
S therefore S-bonded radical cations are typically formed upon oxidati
on of unsubstituted thioethers. Instead, very high radiation chemical
yields of CO2 (G = 3.5-6.0) and of alpha-(alkylthio)-alkyl radicals ar
e observed over the entire investigated pH region (1.0-7.5). Mechanist
ically, the formation of CO2 and the associated reaction kinetics incl
uding solvent kinetic isotope effects suggest the occurrence of an int
ramolecular electron transfer from the carboxyl group to the oxidized
sulfur function followed by homolytic carbon-carboxyl bond breakage in
to carbon dioxide and the alpha-(alkylthio)alkyl radical. The (OH)-O-.
radical-induced decarboxylation can receive part of its driving force
from the resonance stabilization of the R-S-CH2. radical resulting fr
om CO2 cleavage.