Photochemistry of Sulfilimine-Based Nitrene Precursors: Generation of Both Singlet and Triplet Benzoylnitrene
Author(s) -
Vasumathi Desikan,
Yonglin Liu,
John P. Toscano,
William S. Jenks
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
the journal of organic chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.2
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1520-6904
pISSN - 0022-3263
DOI - 10.1021/jo071049r
Subject(s) - nitrene , chemistry , photochemistry , singlet state , triplet state , microsecond , singlet fission , quenching (fluorescence) , intersystem crossing , ground state , excited state , organic chemistry , physics , atomic physics , molecule , fluorescence , quantum mechanics , astronomy , catalysis
Photolysis of N-benzoyl-S,S-diphenylsulfilimine or N-benzoyl dibenzothiophene sulfilimine produces PhNCO and also benzoylnitrene. Direct observation of the triplet nitrene, energetic differences between the singlet and triplet state of the nitrene, and oxygen quenching experiments suggest that the triplet nitrene derives from the triplet excited state of the sulfilimine precursors, rather than through equilibration of nearby singlet and triplet states of the nitrene itself. In acetonitrile, the formation of an ylide, followed by cyclization to the corresponding oxadiazole, is the predominant nitrene chemistry, occurring on the time scale of a few microseconds and few tens of microseconds, respectively. Trapping experiments with substrates such as cis-4-octene suggest that reactivity of the nitrene is mainly through the singlet channel, despite a fairly small energy gap between the singlet ground state and the triplet.
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