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Development of N-cyclopropylanilines to probe the oxidative properties of triplet-state photosensitizers Nicholas C. Pflug, Markus Schmitt, and Kristopher McNeill Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • Publication Date (Web): 26 Mar 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 3, 2019
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Environmental Science & Technology
Development of N-cyclopropylanilines to probe the oxidative properties of triplet-state photosensitizers Nicholas C. Pflug, Markus Schmitt, and Kristopher McNeill*
Institute of Biogeochemistry and Pollutant Dynamics, ETH Zurich, 8092 Zurich Switzerland
*Corresponding Author: Kristopher McNeill Phone: +41-(0)44-6324755; Fax: +41-(0)44-6321438; Email:
[email protected];
Submitted to Environmental Science & Technology March 26, 2019
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ABSTRACT 3sensitizer*
oxidation R1 R2
H N
back electron transfer antioxidant quenching
2
R1 R2
H N
ring opening
R1 R2
+ sens
antioxidant
H N
CH2
O2 Oxidized Products
3
Anilines have been shown to be especially susceptible to single-electron oxidation by
4
excited triplet-state photosensitizers (3sens*), and thus, are good potential candidates to probe
5
the oxidative properties of triplet-state chromophoric dissolved organic matter (3CDOM*).
6
However, steady-state experiments tend to underestimate their rate of oxidation by 3CDOM*
7
due to radical cation quenching (i.e., aniline+ aniline) by antioxidant moieties present in
8
DOM. We envisioned the potential utility of N-cyclopropylaniline (CPA) to overcome this
9
limitation, as it is known to undergo spontaneous, irreversible cyclopropyl ring-opening after
10
an initial single-electron oxidation. To test this, first a set of CPA analogs was synthesized
11
and then paired with a model sensitizer and antioxidant, or various DOM isolates, to examine
12
their reactivity and susceptibility to antioxidant quenching during steady-state photolysis
13
experiments. Next, time-resolved measurements of CPA and CPA analog oxidation were
14
obtained by laser flash photolysis through direct observation of 3sens* and radical cations of
15
CPA and CPA analogs. Finally, CPA photolysis products were isolated by semi-preparative
16
high-performance liquid chromatography and identified by nuclear magnetic resonance
17
spectroscopy. Outcomes of this work, including oxidation bimolecular rate constants of CPA
18
and CPA analogs (~9 x 108 to 4 x 109 M-1s-1), radical cation lifetimes of CPA and its analogs
19
(140-580 ns), and identified ring-opened products, support the usefulness of
20
cyclopropylanilines as single-electron transfer probes in photosensitized aqueous solutions.
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21 22
INTRODUCTION In most natural aquatic systems, chromophoric dissolved organic matter
23
(chromophoric DOM or CDOM) is the dominate light absorber.1-5 Upon absorption of light
24
of sufficient energy, ground-state CDOM is initially promoted to its excited singlet-state and
25
then a small portion (i.e., ~5-10%) undergoes intersystem crossing to the excited triplet-state
26
(3CDOM*).6 3CDOM* is a highly reactive species that plays a central role in sunlit natural
27
waters through the generation of other reactive intermediates (e.g., singlet oxygen, 1O2) via
28
energy transfer, and also through the degradation of environmental contaminates via direct
29
oxidation.6-7
30
There are numerous examples in the literature of small molecule, pollutant oxidation
31
by 3CDOM*,8-11 of which, those pollutants containing aniline or phenol moieties are well
32
represented.7 It has been shown that 3CDOM* is capable of oxidizing electron-rich phenols to
33
phenoxy radicals and there is evidence that supports both two-step (i.e., electron transfer
34
followed by proton transfer) and single-step (i.e., proton-coupled electron transfer) oxidation
35
mechanisms.7 By contrast, despite their structural similarity to phenols, both electron-rich
36
and -poor classes of anilines have been shown to be especially susceptible to oxidation by
37
3CDOM*,
38
an electron donor to an acceptor) mechanism.7, 12 The lower aqueous oxidation potentials of
39
anilines relative to phenols, allows them to be more easily oxidized by SET reactions.12
40
Because of this, anilines and compounds with aniline moieties, are good potential candidates
41
to probe the single-electron oxidative properties of 3CDOM*.
mainly through a single-electron transfer (SET, i.e., transfer of one electron from
42
In order to quantify and study triplet states of organic matter, it is desirable to have
43
probe molecules that react with these triplet states in a selective and well understood way.
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Anilines are good candidate SET probes, because of their inherent susceptibility to oxidation
45
by triplet sensitizers (3sens*) and 3CDOM*. However, their reaction kinetics are complicated
46
by the fact that one-electron oxidized products (i.e., aniline•+) have been shown to be
47
vulnerable to back electron transfer (BET) from reduced sensitizers and also radical cation
48
quenching (i.e., aniline+ aniline) by antioxidant moieties present in DOM.13-15 Thus,
49
steady-state experiments can give a net rate constant of aniline oxidation that is significantly
50
lower than the rate constant for SET oxidation by 3sens* or 3CDOM*. The net rate constant
51
of oxidation of anilines by 3CDOM* is therefore a combination of the base rate constant of
52
oxidation, which is directly related to the concentration of 3CDOM*, and repair by both BET
53
and by a pool of antioxidant moieties, the latter of which depends both on the amount and the
54
potency of the antioxidants. There are some secondary processes that are known to
55
outcompete BET, after initial SET from a donor to an acceptor, including fast chemical
56
reaction, isomerization, or fragmentation.16 An ideal aniline-based probe for 3CDOM* would
57
not be susceptible to repair by BET or antioxidants present in the DOM mixture.
58
N-cyclopropylanilines have been used as SET probes in both enzymatic17 and
59
chemical systems,18 in addition to their use as scaffolds in organic synthesis.19-23 Their utility
60
as SET probes or synthetic scaffolds arises from an irreversible ring-opening of the
61
cyclopropyl group upon an initial oxidation to their nitrogen radical cations.20 The
62
irreversibility of this process is due to gains in free energy (i.e., strain energy, ~28 kcal/mol)24
63
associated with cyclopropane ring-opening to yield an iminium distonic radical cation. The
64
resulting distonic radical cation is then able to undergo downstream chemical reactions. We
65
envisioned a similar plausible scenario upon SET oxidation of N-cyclopropylaniline (CPA) by
66
3sens*
or 3CDOM*. We hypothesize that CPA would undergo near diffusion-controlled
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oxidation to form CPA radical cation (CPA+) in the presence of 3sens* or 3CDOM* and a
68
subsequent spontaneous, irreversible cyclopropyl ring-opening would outcompete the rate of
69
BET or antioxidant quenching (AQ). The irreversible nature of cyclopropyl ring-opening
70
would act as a short-circuit in BET or AQ processes and thus prevent CPA+ from returning to
71
its neutral state (i.e., CPA).
72
To test this hypothesis, first a suite of CPA analogs was synthesized and then paired
73
with an appropriate model sensitizer and antioxidant, or various DOM isolates, to examine
74
their reactivity and susceptibility to BET and AQ during steady-state photolysis experiments.
75
Next, time-resolved measurements of CPA oxidation were obtained by laser flash photolysis
76
(LFP) through direct observation of 3sens* and CPA+ lifetimes. Finally, CPA photolysis
77
products were isolated by semi-preparative high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)
78
and identified by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR).
79
MATERIALS AND METHODS
80
Reagents. Synthetic procedures used cyclopropylamine (Sigma; 98%, cryodistilled
81
before use), bromobenzene (Sigma; ≥ 99.5%), 2-bromoanisole (Sigma; 97%), 1-bromo-3-
82
chlorobenzene (Sigma; ≥ 99%), palladium (II) acetate [Pd(OAc)2, Apollo Scientific; ≥
83
99.95%], BrettPhos (Sigma; 96%), potassium tert-butoxide (t-BuOK, Sigma; ≥ 98%), aniline
84
(Sigma; ≥ 99.5%), acetic anhydride (Sigma; ≥ 99%), anhydrous sodium acetate (Fluka; ≥
85
99.5%), ethyl acetate (Fisher Scientific; 99.97%), concentrated hydrochloric acid (Merck;
86
37%), toluene (Acros; 99.8%, extra dry, over molecular sieves, degassed via three freeze-
87
pump-thaw cycles before use), and chloroform-d (CDCl3, Armar; 99.8 atom%D, 0.03 v/v%
88
TMS).
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Photolysis experiments used N-cyclopropylaniline (Acrotein; 97%), N-
90
isopropylaniline (N-IPA, Sigma; PESTANAL analytical standard), 2-acetonaphthone (2AN,
91
Sigma; ≥ 99%), 3-methoxyacetophenone (3MAP, Aldrich; 97%), phenol (PhOH, Sigma; ≥
92
99%), TEMPO (Sigma; 98%), 2,4-dimethylphenol (DMP, Sigma; 97%), 4-methoxyphenol (4-
93
MP, Aldrich; 99%), 2,4,6-trimethylphenol (TMP, Sigma; 99%), furfuryl alcohol (FFA,
94
Merck; ≥ 98%), anhydrous potassium phosphate monobasic (Sigma; ≥ 99%), nanopore water
95
(resistivity >18 M cm), acetonitrile (Fisher Scientific; ≥ 99.9%), isopropanol (IPA, Chemie
96
Brunschwig; HPLC grade). Suwannee River Fulvic Acid (SRFA, Standard II, 2S101F),
97
Suwannee River Natural Organic Matter (SRNOM, 2R101N), and Nordic Reservoir Natural
98
Organic Matter (NRNOM, 1R108N) samples were purchased from the International Humic
99
Substances Society. HPLC analysis used mixtures of nanopore water (resistivity >18 M
100
cm) and acetonitrile (Fisher Scientific; ≥ 99.9%) as the mobile phase.
101
Synthetic Procedures. CPA probes (i.e., CPA, 3-Cl-CPA, and 2-MeO-CPA) were
102
synthesized according to previously described Buchwald-Hartwig amination procedures.23, 25-
103
26
104
loaded with Pd(OAc)2 (0.9 mg, 0.004 mmol) and BrettPhos (6.4 mg, 0.012 mmol), degassed
105
under vacuum, sealed with a Teflon stopper, and then transferred to a glovebox. The tube was
106
then loaded with bromobenzene (60.0 mg, 0.38 mmol; for CPA), 1-bromo-3-chlorobenzene
107
(73.1 mg, 0.38 mmol; for 3-Cl-CPA), or 2-bromoanisole (71.5 mg, 0.38 mmol; for 2-MeO-
108
CPA), cyclopropylamine (26.2 mg, 0.459 mmol), t-BuOK (64.3 mg, 0.573 mmol), and
109
toluene (2 mL), sealed, removed from the glovebox, and heated (80 oC, while stirring) for ~
110
18 h. After completion, the reaction mixture was cooled to room temperature, diluted with
111
ethyl acetate, filtered over a short pad of silica gel, and concentrated in vacuo. Purification by
Briefly, a Schlenk tube (10 mL), equipped with a Teflon-coated magnetic stir bar, was
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reverse-phase semi-preparative HPLC (100% acetonitrile mobile phase) afforded the CPA
113
probes (~85% CPA, 89% 2-MeO-CPA, and 92% 3-Cl-CPA isolated yields).
114
Steady-State Photolysis Experiments. Photochemical experiments were conducted
115
using a commercially available Rayonet merry-go-round photoreactor (The Southern New
116
England Ultraviolet Company, Branford, CT, USA) equipped with 1-6 x 365 nm UVA bulbs
117
[3.5 x 10-9 mEcm-2s-1nm-1 average spectral irradiance, see Figure S1 in the Supporting
118
Information (SI) for spectrum]. Samples were irradiated in 15 x 85 mm borosilicate culture
119
tubes (100% transmittance at > 340nm). Tubes were loaded with 6 mL of 5 mM potassium
120
phosphate buffer (pH 7), an initial aqueous probe (e.g., CPA or N-IPA) concentration of 10
121
μM (~ 1-2 mg/L), and initial aqueous 2AN concentration of 5 M (~ 1 mg/L) or DOM
122
concentration of 1-20 mgC/L (total organic carbon measurements were performed using a
123
Shimadzu TOC-L analyzer). Antioxidant quenching experiments used an initial aqueous
124
phenol concentration of 2.5-25 M (~0.25-2.5 mg/L) and radical chain scavenging
125
experiments used an initial aqueous inhibitor (e.g., 4-MP) concentration of 2.5-50 M (~0.3-6
126
mg/L) or 1-20 v/v% of isopropanol. In some experiments, 50 M FFA (~5 mg/L) was used
127
as an internal probe for monitoring 1O2 steady-state concentrations. All working solutions of
128
CPA analogs, N-IPA, and 2AN were made from freshly prepared 2.5 mM acetonitrile stock
129
solutions (CPA>3-Cl-CPA and relative rate of cyclopropyl
217
ring-opening: 3-Cl-CPA>CPA>2-MeO-CPA (Figure 1A).
218
UV-vis spectra of the CPA analogs showed similar absorptive features, however, a
219
noticeable bathochromic shift (~10-20 nm) was observed for 3-Cl-CPA (Figure 1B).
220
Notably, the secondary, lowest intensity absorption band presumably arising from n*
221
transitions of 3-Cl-CPA was found to overlap more than the other analogs with UVB 9 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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wavelengths (i.e., 290-320 nm) of light. Thus, UVA bulbs with an irradiance range of ~350-
223
400 nm (peak ~365 nm; see Figure S1) were used in photolysis experiments in an attempt to
224
avoid potential direct photolysis of the CPA probes. Indeed, phototransformation of probes in
225
the absence of 2AN and CDOM was found to be negligible over equivalent timescales of
226
sensitized experiments (Figure S2 and Figures S5-S7).
227
Duel experimental approach to test CPA susceptibility to AQ. To test the utility of
228
CPAs as steady-state SET probes, a dual experimental approach was employed (Figure 2),
229
similar to that first described by Wenk and Canonica.13 First, a model system (i.e., System 1)
230
was used with 32AN* operating as the photochemical oxidant and phenol fulfilling the role of
231
antioxidant to test the susceptibility of CPA to AQ after an initial SET. 2AN was chosen as
232
the model photosensitizer because it absorbs light in the UVA region and has an excited-state
233
single-electron reduction potential [Eo* (32AN*2AN) ~1.34 VNHE in water]13 above the
234
oxidation potential of all three CPA probes and thus, SET is predicted to be
235
thermodynamically favorable. Phenol was selected as the model antioxidant because it does
236
not absorb light in the UVA region and 32AN* quenching by phenol has previously been
237
found to be negligible, while aniline radical cation quenching by phenol (i.e., AQ) was found
238
to readily occur.13 Second, a system (i.e., System 2) with DOM operating as both the oxidant
239
and antioxidant was used to further examine the effectiveness of CPAs as SET probes. The
240
utility of System 2 lies in the structurally heterogeneous nature of DOM itself, particularly its
241
quinone and phenol moieties, which gives it the capacity to both accept or donate electrons,
242
respectively. It is predicted that an antioxidant inhibitory effect, previously described by
243
Wenk and Canonica for anilines,13 will not be observable in either CPA system if the rate of
244
cyclopropyl ring-opening outcompetes AQ (Figure 2).
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245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254
Figure 2. A duel experimental approach to test CPA susceptibility to AQ with either (1) a system using 2AN as the oxidant and phenol as the antioxidant or (2) a system using DOM as both the oxidant and antioxidant. Also shown are expected trends in reactivity, with no inhibition effect13 observable in either system if the rate of ring-opening (RO) outcompetes AQ. Figure S14 in the Supporting Information gives a more complete proposed mechanism for the conversion to the observed products.
255
approach outlined for System 1 were conducted in parallel for CPA and N-IPA (positive AQ
256
control). N-IPA was chosen due to its close structural similarity to CPA, but with an N-
257
isopropyl group substituted for the N-cyclopropyl group, which should render it susceptible to
258
AQ back to the starting N-IPA compound. As shown in Figure 3A, with the concentration of
259
2AN held constant, increasing concentrations of phenol had no observable effect on the rate
260
of CPA photodecay, suggesting that the rate of cyclopropyl ring-opening does indeed
261
outcompete AQ. By contrast, an inhibitory effect of ~20% was observed on the rate of N-IPA
To test our hypothesis, first, steady-state photochemical experiments following the
262 11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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1.0
10.0
B
0.020 0.015
H N
0.010
kobs (10-3 s-1)
0.9
0.8 H N
0.7
2
R
N-IPA 0.6 0
5
10
15
20
25
30
=
H N
R
=
6 95 0.
OCH3
4.0
H N
2.0
0.000
0.0 0
4.0
5
10
15
3.0
20
25
0 1.2
D 2
R
=
0.6
1.0
0.3
0.0
0.0 0
5
10
15
5
20
25
10
15
20
25
E
0.9
4 99 0. H N
[PhOH] M
263
2
6.0
2 81 0.
0.005
2.0 CPA
C
8.0
0. 99 8
A
Normalized kobs (k2AN,PhOH/k2AN)
System 2
0.025
R2 =
System 1
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H N
Cl
0
5
10
15
20
25
[SRFA] mgC/L
264 265 266 267 268 269
Figure 3. Relative reaction rate constants for the photooxidation of 10 M CPA or N-IPA with 5 M 2AN at pH 7 as a function of phenol concentration (A) and light-screening corrected reaction rate constants for the photooxidation of 10 M N-IPA (B) and CPA analogs (C-E) at pH 7 as a function of SRFA concentration. Lines connecting data points in (B) and (C) are shown to accentuate their deviation from a linear correlation.
270
decay, apparent from the gradual decrease in rate constant with increasing phenol
271
concentrations.
272
With this proof of concept in hand, steady-state photolysis experiments following the
273
approach outlined for System 2 were conducted in parallel for N-IPA and all three CPA
274
analogs, using SRFA as a representative DOM model. In these experiments, the following
275
trend in rates of reactivity was observed: 2-MeO-CPA>CPA>3-Cl-CPA>>N-IPA (Figures
276
3B-3E), which is consistent with the reactivity trend predicted by Eo (CPACPA+) values of
277
the CPA probes (Figure 1A). The ~2-orders of magnitude lower kobs found for N-IPA relative
278
to CPA, assuming a similar single-electron Eo value for both compounds, suggests an AQ
279
effect on the former. Indeed, increasing concentrations of SRFA showed an antioxidant
280
inhibitory effect on the rate of N-IPA decay, apparent from the steady, albeit nonlinear
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increase in rate constant (Figure 3B). This behavior can be explained by the antagonistic
282
photosensitizing and inhibitory effects of SRFA.
283
A slight inhibitory effect with increasing concentrations of SRFA was observed for 2-
284
MeO-CPA (Figure 3C). After initial oxidation, we suspect that 2-MeO-CPA’s methoxy
285
substituent provides sufficient resonance stabilization to the resulting nitrogen radical cation
286
to slow cyclopropyl ring-opening and thus, allows AQ to become a more competitive process.
287
Alternatively, 2-MeO-CPA may be susceptible to a radical chain reaction as discussed in
288
further detail below. By contrast, no antioxidant inhibitory effect was observed for CPA
289
(Figure 3D) nor 3-Cl-CPA (Figure 3E), evident from the steady, linear increase in rate
290
constant. These observed AQ susceptibility trends are consistent with expected relative rates
291
of CPA probe ring-opening (i.e., 3-Cl-CPA>CPA>2-MeO-CPA; Figure 1A).32 Finally,
292
photolysis experiments were conducted for CPA using other sources of DOM (i.e., NRNOM
293
and SRNOM) and analogous to the results found for SRFA, no antioxidant inhibitory effect
294
was observed in these systems (Figure S8).
295
Direct observation of 3sens* and CPA+ lifetimes via LFP. With steady-state
296
photochemical experiments showing the potential utility of CPA and 3-Cl-CPA as SET
297
probes, the two compounds were used in LFP experiments to directly measure their effect on
298
3sens*
299
in Figure 4A, LFP-based control experiments with 2AN showed an absorption signal for
300
3AN*
301
presence of CPA (e.g., 2 mM), the lifetime of the 3AN* signal was notably shortened ( ~180
302
ns) and a new transient signal appeared (Figure 4B). This new transient species, which we
303
attributed to CPA+, was observed to have a transient absorbance maximum at ~495 nm and a
lifetime and to detect any transients (e.g., CPA+) formed during oxidation. As shown
with a transient absorbance maximum at ~440 nm and lifetime of ~450 ns. In the
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3O*
A
H N
B
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C
= 580 ns ± 18 ns H N
2 mM
3O*
H N
D Cl
OCH3
304
E
A (490-520 nm)
Time (s)
1 mM
F
= 140 ± 20 ns H N
Cl
Time (s)
Wavelength (nm)
305 306 307 308 309 310
Figure 4. 3D LFP spectra of 400 M 2AN (A), 400 M 2AN + 2 mM CPA (B), 400 M 3MAP (D), and 400 M 3MAP + 3mM 3-Cl-CPA (E) at pH 7 under O2 purged conditions. The colors indicate transient absorption (A) intensity. Also shown is the kinetic trace of CPA+ (C) and 3-Cl-CPA+ (F) transients averaged over A 490-520 nm. CPA+ and 3-ClCPA+ transient lifetimes were calculated from exponential decay fits.
311
lifetime of ~580 ns and has similar properties to previously published LFP data for the radical
312
cation of N-methyl-N-cyclopropylaniline (max ~480 nm, ~580 ns).33 In addition, the
313
intensity of the transient signal was observed to increase with increasing concentrations of
314
CPA (Figure 4C), providing additional support for CPA+ as the species observed. By
315
contrast, the lifetime of the transient signal showed no dependence on the energy of the laser
316
pulse (Figure S9). This suggests that CPA+ lifetime is dictated by the rate of cyclopropyl
317
ring-opening rather than consumption in bimolecular reactions, as previous studies have
318
shown that the rate of bimolecular reactions increases with increases in laser pulse energy.34
319
Experiments were also conducted with N-IPA, which showed a much longer lived (i.e., >50
320
s) transient signal than CPA+ (Figure S10), presumably due to N-IPA+. The transient
321
signal for N-IPA+ (max ~445 nm) was observed in a comparable region of the visible 14 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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322
spectrum as the reported absorbance maximum for N-ethyl-N-isopropylaniline radical cation
323
(max ~460 nm).33 The longer lifetime of N-IPA+ relative to CPA+ is consistent with the
324
stronger AQ effects observed for the former as it has more time to encounter antioxidants
325
present in the system.
326
LFP experiments conducted in the presence of 3-Cl-CPA (e.g., 1 mM) showed a
327
similar shortening of the lifetime of the 3AN* signal ( ~235 ns), however, no other transient
328
signals were observed. In an attempt to facilitate 3-Cl-CPA oxidation, 3MAP was selected as
329
a sensitizer because of its slightly higher Eo* value [(33MAP*3MAP) ~1.64 VNHE in
330
water/ethanol mixture].29 As shown in Figure 4D, LFP-based control experiments with
331
3MAP showed an absorption signal for 33MAP* with a maximum at ~410 nm and lifetime of
332
~200 ns. In the presence of 3-Cl-CPA (e.g., 3 mM), the lifetime of the 33MAP* signal was
333
shortened ( ~50 ns) and a new transient signal grew in over time (Figure 4E). Notably, the
334
new transient species, which we attributed to 3-Cl-CPA+, appears in a similar region of the
335
visible spectrum (max ~500 nm) as CPA+, but has a considerably shorter lifetime ( ~140 ns;
336
Figure 4F). The CPA probe radical cation lifetimes observed by LFP are consistent with the
337
expected relative rates of ring-opening (i.e., 3-Cl-CPA>CPA; Figure 1A).
338
Comparison of steady-state and LFP kinetics. Bimolecular reaction rate constants,
339
or kCPA,2AN values, for CPA and 3-Cl-CPA were estimated by calculating [1O2]ss and [32AN*]ss
340
values derived from FFA depletion kinetics (see Text S1 discussion in the SI) during 2AN
341
sensitized steady-state experiments (Figure 5A). Whereas, bimolecular quenching rate
342
constants, or kq values, were estimated by direct observation of 32AN* lifetime (plotted as 1/)
343
as a function of CPA probe concentration during LFP experiments (i.e., Stern-Volmer plots;
344
Figure 5B). Estimated rate constants for 3-Cl-CPA were found to be near the diffusion15 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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0
2000
4000
6000
8000 10000 12000
7
LN Ct/Co
FFA (CPA) FFA (3-Cl-CPA) CPA 3-Cl-CPA
-0.4 -0.6 -0.8 -1
7.6 x 1010 M-1s-1
-1.2
4.5 x
109
A
M-1s-1
(32-AN*) s-1
0 -0.2
2.4
3000
x 10 9
x1 09 M
4000
5000
-1
s -1
2.5 x 109 M-1s-1
x 9
10
-1
M
-1
s
-1 -1 M s
4-MP 20% IPA TMP DMP TEMPO No Scavenger
4 2.0 x 109 M-1s-1
3 2 1
B 250
500
750
[CPA] M
1000
80
D
70 60 50 40 30 20 10
2.0 x 109 M-1s-1
0 0
Time (s)
345
4.3 x 109 M-1s-1
6000
C
M -1s -1
7 6.
10
-4
-1 s-1 010 M
-3.5
10
-3
2.7
7.6 x 1
-2.5
2000
kCPA,2AN (109 M-1s-1)
0
2.3 x
LN [CPA]t/[CPA]o
1000
-0.5
-2
3-Cl-CPA
5
0 0
-1.5
CPA
6
0
-1.4
-1
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10
20
30
40
[4-MP] M
50
60
346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355
Figure 5. Steady-state depletion kinetics of 10 M CPA and 3-Cl-CPA pH 7 solutions spiked with 50 M FFA and irradiated in the presence of 5 M 2AN (A), LFP Stern-Volmer plot of inverse 32AN* lifetime as a function of CPA analog concentration at pH 7 (B), steady-state depletion kinetics of 10 M CPA pH 7 solutions spiked with 50 M FFA and 25 M of various radical scavengers (or 20% IPA) and irradiated in the presence of 5 M 2AN (C), and bimolecular CPA, 2AN rate constants obtained from steady-state experiments using the same conditions as in (C), as a function of 4-MP concentration (D). All bimolecular rate constants listed for steady-state experiments (i.e., A, C, and D) were derived from FFA depletion kinetics.
356
controlled limit and in close agreement for steady-state and LFP methods (4.5 vs. 4.3 x 109 M-
357
1s-1,
358
of kCPA,2AN values for CPA when compared to kq values derived from LFP experiments (76 vs.
359
2.0 x 109 M-1s-1, respectively). We speculate that a radical chain reaction is responsible for
360
the notable discrepancy in estimated rate constants between the two methods, as CPA LFP
361
experiments required solutions to be purged with O2 (i.e., an electron acceptor) and with 1%
362
isopropanol (i.e., a radical scavenger) added to promote sufficiently stable conditions for data
respectively). However, steady-state experiments resulted in an apparent overestimation
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363
collection. Thus, a suite of known radical scavengers were screened in steady-state
364
experiments (Figure 5C).
365
Using the kq value derived from CPA LFP experiments as a point of reference,
366
TEMPO and DMP were found to yield relatively poor-to-moderate scavenging ability (23 vs.
367
6.7 x 109 M-1s-1 kCPA,2AN values, respectively), while 4-MP, IPA, and TMP were notably more
368
effective (2.4-2.7 x 109 M-1s-1 kCPA,2AN values). Next, the radical scavenging ability of 4-MP
369
was examined. As shown in Figure 5D, with increasing concentrations of 4-MP, kCPA,2AN
370
values for CPA tended to an asymptotic value (2.0 x 109 M-1s-1) which agreed with the kq
371
value measured during LFP experiments, suggesting the complete disruption of radical chain
372
oxidation. Notably, increasing concentrations of 4-MP 10 M had little-to-no observable
373
effect on the rate of CPA photodecay, suggesting that the rate of CPA cyclopropyl ring-
374
opening outcompetes AQ by 4-MP. We speculate that the slightly higher oxidation potential
375
of 3-Cl-CPA makes it less susceptible than CPA to the radical chain process. By contrast, we
376
speculate that the lower oxidation potential of 2-MeO-CPA makes it more susceptible than
377
CPA to the radical chain reaction, and thus, is a potential explanation for the observed
378
behavior in SRFA photosensitized experiments (Figure 3C).
379
Both CPA and 3-Cl-CPA were found to undergo single-electron oxidation near the
380
diffusion-controlled limit (~2-4 x 109 M-1s-1 kCPA,2AN values), and thus, are expected to be as
381
effective as the commonly employed 3CDOM* probe, TMP (~7 x 108 M-1s-1 kTMP,2AN value).29
382
As a direct comparison, SRFA photosensitized experiments were run in parallel for TMP,
383
CPA (with 4-MP added), and 3-Cl-CPA. Measuring kobs for the compounds (Figure S11),
384
with kTMP,SRFA known (5.4 x 108 M-1s-1),35 allowed for the estimation of kCPA,SRFA (1.2 x 109
385
and 8.7 x 108 M-1s-1) for CPA and 3-Cl-CPA, respectively. In these experiments, CPA was
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386
found to be less susceptible (kCPA,SRFA ~3.2 x 109 M-1s-1 with no added 4-MP) to the radical
387
chain reaction observed in 2AN systems, likely due to radical scavenging moieties inherently
388
present in SRFA.
389
We do not expect other reactive intermediates potentially generated in photosensitized
390
solutions (e.g., 1O2 or OH) to play a major role in CPA degradation. For example,
391
experiments conducted in D2O did not show an increase in the rate of CPA decay, which
392
indicates that reaction with 1O2 is not a major pathway.36 In addition, OH could potentially
393
react with CPA, although, reported OH quantum yield values for DOM are less than 0.01%
394
and thus this reaction is likely not important.14
395 396
Photoproduct identification. Initial HPLC assessment of CPA and 2AN dark control mixtures (Figure 6A) showed no reactivity over equivalent timescales of photochemical CPA O
2AN
H N
A H N
Absorbance
2AN
H N
1
~25%
O
2 3 0
2
4
6
8
10
0
2
C
CPA
4
6 H N
1
0
398 399 400 401 402
2
2
SRFA
4
6
8
10
0
2
10
D
~70%
O
SRFA
8
OH
H N
397
B
OH
~45%
O
~30% O
4
6
8
10
Retention Time (min) Figure 6. HPLC chromatogram of 10 M CPA and 5 M 2AN (A) or 5 mg C/L SRFA (C) pH 7 dark control solutions and 10 M CPA and 5 M 2AN (B) or 5 mg C/L SRFA (D) pH 7 photolysis mixtures. Peaks labelled 1-3 in B (and 1-2 in D) correspond to products generated during irradiation. HPLC calibration curves of isolated photoproducts were used to calculate % conversion of CPA. 18 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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403
experiments. Irradiation of the mixtures showed three, more polar products (relative to CPA,
404
with earlier retention times of ~2.0, 2.7, and 3.4 min on a reverse phase C18 column) grow in
405
over time by HPLC analysis (Figure 6B). Next, a CPA-2AN mixture was scaled large
406
enough to generate a sufficient amount of products for characterization (1 L and 375 M
407
initial CPA concentration), irradiated until CPA was below our limit of analytical detection,
408
concentrated, and the products isolated via semi-preparative HPLC. The spectroscopic
409
analyses that led to the identification of each product are discussed in greater detail below.
410
1H
NMR analysis of photolysis fraction 1 (i.e., product 1, retention time ~2.0 min)
411
showed loss of the three cyclopropyl proton signals and emergence of a methylene triplet at
412
2.63 and a downfield methylene triplet at 3.99, consistent with oxidation (Figure S12).
413
The 1H NMR data for product 1 agree with that of 3-hydroxy-N-phenylpropanamide, a
414
previously identified ring-opened product of CPA air oxidation.37 Isolated product 1 was
415
used for HPLC calibration and was found to account for ~45% of the converted CPA mass in
416
2AN sensitized systems.
417
1H
NMR analysis of photolysis fraction 2 (i.e., product 2, retention time ~2.7 min)
418
showed loss of the three cyclopropyl proton signals and emergence of a three-proton singlet at
419
2.17 (Figure S13). The 1H NMR data for product 2 agree with that of acetanilide, another
420
previously identified ring-opened product of CPA air oxidation.37 Product 2 was found to
421
account for ~25% of the converted CPA mass in 2AN sensitized systems.
422
Previous studies have suggested that after an initial SET oxidation of CPA, the
423
resulting CPA+ undergoes cyclopropyl ring-opening to yield a distonic radical cation, which
424
is then capable of reacting with molecular O2 to form an endoperoxide intermediate.20, 37 The
425
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426
to yield 3-hydroxy-N-phenylpropanamide and acetanilide products.37 We suspect a similar
427
mechanism of oxidative transformation in the 2AN photosensitized systems (see Figure S14
428
for proposed mechanism and associated discussion).
429
During the course of concentrating the CPA-2AN photolysis mixture, product 3
430
(retention time ~3.4 min) was found to degrade, and thus, was not isolated. Because of its
431
instability, we suspect that this product likely corresponds to the above mentioned
432
endoperoxide intermediate (i.e., N-phenyl-1,2-dioxolan-3-amine, Figure S14).
433
Initial HPLC assessment of CPA and SRFA dark control mixtures (Figure 6C) also
434
showed no reactivity over equivalent timescales of photochemical experiments. Irradiation of
435
the mixtures showed two, more polar products (relative to CPA, with retention times of ~2.0
436
and 2.7 min) grow in over time by HPLC analysis (Figure 6D). In this case, the two products
437
were not isolated, however, retention time data suggest the formation of 3-hydroxy-N-
438
phenylpropanamide (i.e., product 1, ~70%) and acetanilide (i.e., product 2, ~30%) in SRFA
439
photosensitized experiments. Although not explicitly explored, we speculate that analogous
440
ring-opened products are also formed for 3-Cl-CPA in 2AN and SRFA sensitized
441
experiments, because of the similar product distributions observed by HPLC analysis.
442
Environmental implications. As previously mentioned, anilines have been shown to
443
be especially susceptible to single-electron oxidation by 3sens*, and thus, are good potential
444
candidates to probe the oxidative properties of 3CDOM*. However, steady-state experiments
445
tend to underestimate their rate of oxidation by 3CDOM* due to radical cation quenching (i.e.,
446
aniline+ aniline) by antioxidant moieties present in DOM. Two of the three synthesized
447
CPA analogs that we have studied in this report (i.e., CPA and 3-Cl-CPA) are able to
448
overcome this limitation of AQ through a spontaneous, irreversible cyclopropyl ring-opening
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449
event, supported by direct observation of CPA+ via LFP and identification of ring-opened,
450
oxidized products. The effectiveness of CPA and 3-Cl-CPA in this process is likely governed
451
by their relatively short CPA+ lifetimes (i.e., 140-580 ns) compared to anilines without a N-
452
cyclopropyl group (e.g, >50 s for N-IPA+). In addition, their fast single-electron oxidation
453
rate constants near the diffusion-controlled limit (~2-4 x 109 M-1s-1 kCPA,2AN values), make
454
them more than competitive from a kinetic point of view with the commonly employed
455
3CDOM*
456
Cl-CPA, and TMP in SRFA photosensitized experiments allowed for the estimation of
457
kCPA,SRFA (1.2 x 109 and 8.7 x 108 M-1s-1) for CPA and 3-Cl-CPA, respectively, which were
458
found to have a higher rate constant than TMP (5.4 x 108 M-1s-1 kTMP,SRFA). Although CPA
459
was susceptible to a radical chain reaction in photosensitized systems and therefore required
460
the addition of a radical scavenger, 3-Cl-CPA was not observed to be affected by this process.
461
probe, TMP (~7 x 108 M-1s-1 kTMP,2AN value). Indeed, direct comparison of CPA, 3-
Outcomes of this work, including CPA bimolecular rate constants, CPA+ lifetimes,
462
and identified ring-opened products, support the usefulness of N-cyclopropylanilines as
463
steady-state SET probes in photosensitized aqueous solutions. These outcomes also likely
464
benefit other areas of study where N-cyclopropylanilines have been used as SET probes in
465
biological and chemical systems, in addition to their use as scaffolds in organic synthesis.
466
Finally, this work has laid the foundation for future studies, including the use of CPA analogs
467
for a more thorough investigation of the oxidative properties of 3CDOM*
468 469 470
SUPPORTING INFORMATION List of abbreviations, Rayonet UVA spectrum, steady-state kinetic plots, equations and associated discussion for determination of steady-state bimolecular reaction rate
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471
constants, laser pulse energy plot, N-IPA LFP spectrum, NMR spectra, and proposed
472
mechanism (PDF).
473
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
474
This work was financially supported by ETH Zurich and a grant from the Swiss
475
National Science Foundation (Grant number 200021_156198). We would like to thank
476
Rachele Ossola for providing spectral irradiance measurments.
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