Exchange Reactions of Deuterated Benzene Derivatives with

Base-catalyzed halogen dance, and other reactions of aryl halides. Joseph F. Bunnett. Accounts of Chemical Research 1972 5 (4), 139-147. Abstract | PD...
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G. E. HALL,R. PICCOLINI AND J. D. ROBERTS

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"80 320 360 400 h, mp, disubstituted compounds. Fig. 4.-lVave lengths of trisubstituted compounds of Table I (only X or Y is meta directing) plotted as. the most displaced bands of corresponding constituent disubstituted compounds: bottom, first primary bands; top, secondary bands. The ordinate axis for the secondary bands is a t the right of the figure. In the upper group, solid points represent data identified by footnote c in Table I.

240 880 320 360 400 X, mp, disubstituted compounds. Fig. 5.-Wave lengths of trisubstituted compounds of Table I1 (only 2 is mete directing) plotted us. the most displaced bands of corresponding constituent disubstituted compounds: bottom, first primary bands; top, secondary bands. The ordinate axis for the secondary bands is a t the right of the figure.

and vibrational symmetries which are exclusive of

DETROIT32, MICHIGAS

[CONTRIBUTION KO.1977

FROM THE

those required for the other resonance forms.

GATESA N D CRELLINLABORATORIES OF CHEMISTRY, CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY]

Exchange Reactions of Deuterated Benzene Derivatives with Potassium Amide in Liquid Ammoniala BY GEORGEE. HALL,'^ RICHARD PICCOLINI AND JOHN D. ROBERTS RECEIVED MARCH 7 , 1958 The rates of deuterium-protium exchange have been determined for o-, m- and p-deuterated fluorobenzene, benzotrifluoride and anisole in liquid ammonia solution in the presence of potassium amide. The exchange rates were found to be greatest for the ortho compounds and smallest for the pura compounds. Deuterobenzene and o-deuterotoluene reacted too slowly for convenient measurement. The results are interpreted on the basis of the operation of combined inductive and field effects of the substituents, mesomeric effects appearing t o be of minor importance.

An understanding of the effect of substituents on the acidity of hydrogens located on benzene rings is important to the interpretation of the unusual rearrangements encountered in amination of aromatic halide^.^-^ For this reason, we have determined the rates of replacement of deuterium by protium for appropriate deuterated benzene deriva( l a ) Supported in part b y T h e Upjohn Company. ( l h ) Faculty Fellow of T h e Fund for t h e Advancement of Education, 1953-1954. (2) Cy.J. D. Roberts, H. E. Simmons, Jr., L. A. Carlsmith and C. W. Vaughan, THISJOWRNAL, T I , 3290 (1953). (3) J. D. Roberts, D. A. Semenow, H. E. Simmons, Jr., a n d L. A. Carlsmith, ibid., papers submitted for publication. (4) J. D. Roberts, C . W. Vaughan, L. A , Carlsmitb, H. E. Simmons, Jr., and D. A. Semenow, ibid., papers submitted for publication.

tives in the presence of a strong base (NH2-) and a proton-donating solvent ("3) .5 Although, in principle, the rate constants k for removal of particular hydrogens need not necessarily be related to the equilibrium ionization constants K A of the same hydrogens, in practice, the relation log k = .Y log K A C (Bronsted catalysis law)6 is generally observed for acids of similar structures. We will assume that this sort of parallelism between k and K A holds for the compounds under discussion and,

+

( 5 ) T h e feasibility of these experiments was first demonstrated qualitatively b y H. E. Simmons, Jr., P h . D . Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1954. (6) L . P. H a m m e t t , "Physical Organic Chemistry," McGraa-Hill Book Co., New York, N. Y . , 1940, pp. 222-227.

Sept. 5 , 19%

DEUTERIUM-PROTIUM EXCHANGE FOR DEUTERATED FLUORORENZENE 4A41

furthermore, that the proportionality constant x is positive, so that a high rate constant implies a high relative acidity. The exchange reactions were carried out by adding a solution of potassium amide in liquid ammonia to a solution of the deuterated benzene derivative in liquid ammonia. After an appropriate time, the amide was neutralized by addition of ammonium chloride. Whenever practical, a run was made with each compound for a t least one half-life. The deuterobenzene derivatives were 0.25-0.6 M (partly depending on solubility) and the potassium amide was 0.6 M throughout. The reasonable assumption was made that the reactions were first order with respect to the deuterium compound. The mole per cent. of unreacted deuterium derivative in the reaction product was determined by comparison of the intensities of the infrared absorption bands due to deuterium with the intensities of the same bands in the starting material.’ Pseudo first-order rate constants were calculated from the usual equations.

TABLEI PSEUDO FIRST-ORDER RATE CONSTANTS FOR DEUTERIUMPROTIUM EXCHANGE OF SUBSTITUTED DEUTEROBENZESES AMIDEIN LIQUIDAM(CBH4DX)WITH 0.6 M POTASSIUM X

2-F

M O X A (AT Reaction time see.

80

10 3-F

4-F

7 . 2 x 103 1 . 8 x 103 7.2 X los

3.6 2-CF3 3-CF3

6 . 1 X lo2

(7) T h e analytical procedure was developed by Dr. D. A. Semenow in connection with related experiments. (8) J. D. Roberts and D. Y. Curtin, THIS JOURNAL, 88, 1658 (1946). (9) D. Bryce-Smith, J . Chem. SOL.,1079 (1954). (10) D. Bryce-Smith, V. Gold and D. P. N. Satchell, ibid., 2743 (1954).

4.9 4-CF3 2-OCH3

3-OCH1

104

11

Results and Discussion The exchange rate constants are given in Table I. The experiments giving nearly 50% exchange are considered to be the most reliable. With fluorobenzene-2-d, the shortest practical reaction time, 10 sec., still gave complete exchange to within the limits of accuracy of the analytical method. The rate constants for anisole-3-d and -4-d and benzene-d are only approximate because of the small extent of reaction. 9 n attempt was made to alkylate the anion from fluorobenzene with methyl iodide in liquid ammonia solution containing equal molar amounts of fluorobenzene and potassium amide. No fluorotoluene could be isolated from the reaction mixture and it is possible that the anion was not present in significant concentration. A salient feature of the experimental results is that the rate constant for replacement of a deuterium atom in a meta-position is intermediate between those for the ortho- and para-positions for all of the compounds studied. This is in marked contrast to the usual belief, based on evidence from electrophilic and “activated” nucleophilic aromatic substitution, that the positions ortho and para to activating substituents are electrically similar and more powerfully activated than meta-positions. However, it should be clear that, in these exchange reactions, there is neither electrophilic nor nucleophilic attack on the benzene nucleus but attack of a base on the hydrogen attached t o the nucleus, This type of attack has been suggesteds for the metalation of benzotrifluoride by n-butyllithium and recently designatedg as a “protophilic” process. Hydrogen isotope effects have been demonstrated’o for the metalation of benzene and toluene by ethylpotassium and these corroborate the suggestion that the carbon-hydrogen bonds are directly involved in the rate-determining step.

x

x lo*

1 . 3 X lo2 6 . 4 X lo2 3.6 x 103 1 . 2 x 103 5 . 7 x 102 5 . 7 x 106

BOILING POINT) P

7.82 9.60 10.54 11.83 7.83 6.96 7.83 7.05 9.13 13.98 7.05 13.98 10.41 11.50 6.71 12.29 6.71 12.29 13.41 13.41 11.81 11.81 11.81

Mole % CsH4DX

k, sec. - 1