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Single and double hydrogen migration in the fragmentation of 3‐methyl‐2‐butyl trifluoroacetate
Author(s) -
Fǎrcaşiu Dan,
Miller Glen,
Hsu Chang S.
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
organic mass spectrometry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.475
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 1096-9888
pISSN - 0030-493X
DOI - 10.1002/oms.1210250804
Subject(s) - chemistry , dissociation (chemistry) , protonation , hydrogen , methyl group , medicinal chemistry , oxygen , kinetic isotope effect , molecule , fragmentation (computing) , photochemistry , ion , organic chemistry , deuterium , group (periodic table) , physics , quantum mechanics , computer science , operating system
Abstract Three of the main oxygen‐containing fragments resulting from 3‐methyl‐2‐butyl trifluoroacetate (11) had been identified previously as the 1‐triflnoroacetoxyethyl cation ( m/z 141, 12, product of simple cleavage), and the products of single ( m/z 142) and double hydrogen transfer ( m/z 143, protonated ethyl trifluoroacetate). Collisionally activated dissociation of m/z 142 and the isotopomers resulting from 11‐2‐ d , 11‐1‐ d 3 , 11‐5,6‐ d 6 , and 11‐ 18 O 2 has established that m/z 142 is the oxygen protonated 1‐trifluoroacetoxyethyl free radical (17) formed by hydrogen shift irom a γ‐methyl group to oxygen in the molecular ion, rather than in a complex (18) between 12 and the 2‐propyl free radical, as expected based on a mechanistic model existing in the literature. The second hydrogen transferred originates in the other γ‐methyl group; its migration may occur, but does not have to, in the complex between 17 and a molecule of propene, prior to dissociation of the two fragments. Collision‐activated dissociation has now shown that the m/z 140 ion observed in the spectrum is the molecular ion of vinyl trifluoroacetate, possibly formed by a hydrogen transfer from 12 to the 2‐propyl radical in the complex 18. The hydrogen migration to oxygen exhibits no isotope effect, whereas the transfers to carbon atoms exhibit small primary and α secondary kinetic isotope effects. Exclusive migration of the tertiary hydrogen from C(3) occurs in the formation of 2‐methylbutene cation radical ( m/z 70) from the molecular ion. The hydrocarbon ion fragments and the heteroatom‐containing fragments are formed from 11 by disjoint pathways.

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