Ce. Brown et al., KINETIC AND SPECTROSCOPIC STUDIES ON ACYL RADICALS IN SOLUTION BY TIME-RESOLVED INFRARED-SPECTROSCOPY, Australian Journal of Chemistry, 48(2), 1995, pp. 363-379
A number of acyl radicals, RC=O, have been generated in hexane or di-t
-butyl peroxide as solvent at room temperature by 308 nm laser flash p
hotolysis, and their spectroscopic and kinetic properties have been ex
amined by time-resolved infrared spectroscopy. The C=O stretching freq
uencies for the RC=O radicals are found to be higher than those of the
corresponding aldehydes, RCHO, by between 108 and 128 cm(-1), an effe
ct attributed to a higher C=O bond order in the radicals. For the RC=O
radicals some typical values of nu(C=O) are: CH3C=O, 1864 cm(-1); (CH
3)(3)CC=O, 1848 cm(-1); and C6H5C=O, 1828 cm(-1) while the correspondi
ng acylperoxyl radicals, RC(O)OO formed by reaction with oxygen have n
u(C=O) values of 1838, 1840 and 1820 cm(-1), respectively. The acyl ra
dicals exhibit a reactivity towards a variety of substrates that is ro
ughly comparable to that of simple alkyl radicals. For reactions of th
e benzoyl radical some typical rate constants/M(-1) s(-1) are: CCl4, 6
.0x10(4); C6H5SH, 4.8x10(7); CCl3Br, 2.2x10(8); Tempo, 1.1x10(9); and
oxygen, 1.8x10(9). Alkanoyl radicals have a rather similar reactivity
to benzoyl. The propanoyl radical reacts with tributyltin deuteride wi
th a rate constant of 3x10(5) M(-1) s(-1). The hex-5-enoyl radical und
ergoes a 5-exo-trig cyclization to form the 2-oxocyclopentylmethyl rad
ical with a rate constant of 2.2x10(5) s(-1) a value which is almost i
dentical to that for cyclization of the hex-5-enyl radical. It is hope
d that our kinetic data will prove useful in the planning of organic s
ynthetic strategies which involve acyl radical chemistry.