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A REP-FAMSEC Method as a Tool in Explaining Reaction Mechanisms: A Nucleophilic Substitution of 2-Phenylquinoxaline as a DFT Case Study

In search for the cause leading to low reaction yields, each step along the reaction energy profile computed for the assumed oxidative nucleophilic substitution of hydrogen (ONSH) reaction between 2-phenylquinoxaline and lithium phenylacetylide was modelled computationally. Intermolecular and intram...

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Autores principales: Mdhluli, Brian Kamogelo, Nxumalo, Winston, Cukrowski, Ignacy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7998666/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33809294
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26061570
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author Mdhluli, Brian Kamogelo
Nxumalo, Winston
Cukrowski, Ignacy
author_facet Mdhluli, Brian Kamogelo
Nxumalo, Winston
Cukrowski, Ignacy
author_sort Mdhluli, Brian Kamogelo
collection PubMed
description In search for the cause leading to low reaction yields, each step along the reaction energy profile computed for the assumed oxidative nucleophilic substitution of hydrogen (ONSH) reaction between 2-phenylquinoxaline and lithium phenylacetylide was modelled computationally. Intermolecular and intramolecular interaction energies and their changes between consecutive steps of ONSH were quantified for molecular fragments playing leading roles in driving the reaction to completion. This revealed that the two reactants have a strong affinity for each other, driven by the strong attractive interactions between Li and two N-atoms, leading to four possible reaction pathways (RP-C2, RP-C3, RP-C5, and RP-C10). Four comparable in energy and stabilizing molecular system adducts were formed, each well prepared for the subsequent formation of a C–C bond at either one of the four identified sites. However, as the reaction proceeded through the TS to form the intermediates (5a–d), very high energy barriers were observed for RP-C5 and RP-C10. The data obtained at the nucleophilic addition stage indicated that RP-C3 was both kinetically and thermodynamically favored over RP-C2. However, the energy barriers observed at this stage were very comparable for both RPs, indicating that they both can progress to form intermediates 5a and 5b. Interestingly, the phenyl substituent (Ph1) on the quinoxaline guided the nucleophile towards both RP-C2 and RP-C3, indicating that the preferred RP cannot be attributed to the steric hindrance caused by Ph1. Upon the introduction of H(2)O to the system, both RPs were nearly spontaneous towards their respective hydrolysis products (8a and 8b), although only 8b can proceed to the final oxidation stage of the ONSH reaction mechanism. The results suggest that RP-C2 competes with RP-C3, which may lead to a possible mixture of their respective products. Furthermore, an alternative, viable, and irreversible reaction path was discovered for the RP-C2 that might lead to substantial waste. Finally, the modified experimental protocol is suggested to increase the yield of the desired product.
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spelling pubmed-79986662021-03-28 A REP-FAMSEC Method as a Tool in Explaining Reaction Mechanisms: A Nucleophilic Substitution of 2-Phenylquinoxaline as a DFT Case Study Mdhluli, Brian Kamogelo Nxumalo, Winston Cukrowski, Ignacy Molecules Article In search for the cause leading to low reaction yields, each step along the reaction energy profile computed for the assumed oxidative nucleophilic substitution of hydrogen (ONSH) reaction between 2-phenylquinoxaline and lithium phenylacetylide was modelled computationally. Intermolecular and intramolecular interaction energies and their changes between consecutive steps of ONSH were quantified for molecular fragments playing leading roles in driving the reaction to completion. This revealed that the two reactants have a strong affinity for each other, driven by the strong attractive interactions between Li and two N-atoms, leading to four possible reaction pathways (RP-C2, RP-C3, RP-C5, and RP-C10). Four comparable in energy and stabilizing molecular system adducts were formed, each well prepared for the subsequent formation of a C–C bond at either one of the four identified sites. However, as the reaction proceeded through the TS to form the intermediates (5a–d), very high energy barriers were observed for RP-C5 and RP-C10. The data obtained at the nucleophilic addition stage indicated that RP-C3 was both kinetically and thermodynamically favored over RP-C2. However, the energy barriers observed at this stage were very comparable for both RPs, indicating that they both can progress to form intermediates 5a and 5b. Interestingly, the phenyl substituent (Ph1) on the quinoxaline guided the nucleophile towards both RP-C2 and RP-C3, indicating that the preferred RP cannot be attributed to the steric hindrance caused by Ph1. Upon the introduction of H(2)O to the system, both RPs were nearly spontaneous towards their respective hydrolysis products (8a and 8b), although only 8b can proceed to the final oxidation stage of the ONSH reaction mechanism. The results suggest that RP-C2 competes with RP-C3, which may lead to a possible mixture of their respective products. Furthermore, an alternative, viable, and irreversible reaction path was discovered for the RP-C2 that might lead to substantial waste. Finally, the modified experimental protocol is suggested to increase the yield of the desired product. MDPI 2021-03-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7998666/ /pubmed/33809294 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26061570 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Mdhluli, Brian Kamogelo
Nxumalo, Winston
Cukrowski, Ignacy
A REP-FAMSEC Method as a Tool in Explaining Reaction Mechanisms: A Nucleophilic Substitution of 2-Phenylquinoxaline as a DFT Case Study
title A REP-FAMSEC Method as a Tool in Explaining Reaction Mechanisms: A Nucleophilic Substitution of 2-Phenylquinoxaline as a DFT Case Study
title_full A REP-FAMSEC Method as a Tool in Explaining Reaction Mechanisms: A Nucleophilic Substitution of 2-Phenylquinoxaline as a DFT Case Study
title_fullStr A REP-FAMSEC Method as a Tool in Explaining Reaction Mechanisms: A Nucleophilic Substitution of 2-Phenylquinoxaline as a DFT Case Study
title_full_unstemmed A REP-FAMSEC Method as a Tool in Explaining Reaction Mechanisms: A Nucleophilic Substitution of 2-Phenylquinoxaline as a DFT Case Study
title_short A REP-FAMSEC Method as a Tool in Explaining Reaction Mechanisms: A Nucleophilic Substitution of 2-Phenylquinoxaline as a DFT Case Study
title_sort rep-famsec method as a tool in explaining reaction mechanisms: a nucleophilic substitution of 2-phenylquinoxaline as a dft case study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7998666/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33809294
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26061570
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