Direct Comparison of Solution
and Gas-Phase Reactions
of the Three Distonic Isomers of the Pyridine Radical Cation with
Methanol
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Abstract
To directly compare the reactivity of positively charged
carbon-centered
aromatic σ-radicals toward methanol in solution and in the gas
phase, the 2-, 3-, and 4-dehydropyridinium cations (distonic isomers
of the pyridine radical cation) were generated by ultraviolet photolysis
of the corresponding iodo precursors in a mixture of water and methanol
at varying pH. The reaction mixtures were analyzed by using liquid
chromatography/mass spectrometry. Hydrogen atom abstraction was the
only reaction observed for the 3- and 4-dehydropyridinium cations
(and pyridines) in solution. This also was the major reaction observed
earlier in the gas phase. Depending on the pH, the hydrogen atom can
be abstracted from different molecules (i.e., methanol or water) and
from different sites (in methanol) by the 3- and 4-dehydropyridinium
cations/pyridines in solution. In the pH range 1–4, the methyl
group of methanol is the main hydrogen atom donor site for both 3-
and 4-dehydropyridinium cations (just like in the gas phase). At higher
pH, the hydroxyl groups of water and methanol also act as hydrogen
atom donors. This finding is rationalized by a greater abundance of
the unprotonated radicals that preferentially abstract hydrogen atoms
from the polar hydroxyl groups. The percentage yield of hydrogen atom
abstraction by these radicals was found to increase with lowering
the pH in the pH range 1.0–3.2. This pH effect is rationalized
by polar effects: the lower the pH, the greater the fraction of protonated
(more polar) radicals in the solution. This finding is consistent
with previous results obtained in the gas phase and suggests that
gas-phase studies can be used to predict solution reactivity, but
only as long as the same reactive species is studied in both experiments.
This was found not to be the case for the 2-iodopyridinium cation.
Photolysis of this precursor in solution resulted in the formation
of two major addition products, 2-hydroxy- and 2-methoxypyridinium
cations, in addition to the hydrogen atom abstraction product. These
addition products were not observed in the earlier gas-phase studies
on 2-dehydropyridinium cation. Their observation in solution is explained
by the formation of another reactive intermediate, the 2-pyridyl cation,
upon photolysis of 2-iodopyridinium cation (and 2-iodopyridine). The
same intermediate was observed in the gas phase but it was removed
before examining the reactions of the desired radical, 2-dehydropyridinium
cation (which cannot be done in solution)