M. Mohr et H. Zipse, Does the cationic or the radical character dominate the reactivity of alkene radical cations towards solvent molecules?, PHYS CHEM P, 3(7), 2001, pp. 1246-1252
The reaction of ethylene radical cations with a broad selection of uncharge
d nucleophiles (hydrogen fluoride, dichloromethane, trifluoroethanol, water
, formaldehyde, methanol, ethanol, ethylene glycol, dimethyl formamide, ace
tonitrile, ammonia) has been studied at the BHandHLYP/6-31+G(d,p) level of
theory. With the exception of hydrogen fluoride and dichloromethane, all of
these nucleophiles form covalent addition products with ethylene radical c
ations. Transition states for these addition reactions could, however, not
be identified. The reaction energies calculated for the addition reactions
correlate well with the proton affinities of the respective nucleophiles. B
ased on this correlation the reactivity of ethylene radical cations can be
characterized as intrinsically cationic. The reaction of ammonia, the water
dimer, and the water trimer with the radical cations of some substituted a
lkenes (propene, trans-but-2-ene, butadiene, styrene) have been studied at
the same level of theory. In all cases the most exothermic reaction occurs
for the water trimer. Comparison of the reaction energies calculated for th
ese radical cations with those calculated for the analogously substituted c
arbocations shows that alkene radical cations can best be understood as str
ongly stabilized carbocations. The stabilizing effect of the radical center
on cationic intermediates is not constant and varies between 40 kcal mol(-
1) for the smaller systems and 20 kcal mol(-1) for the larger systems inves
tigated in this study.