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Unimolecular fragmentations of long‐chain aliphatic iminium ions
Author(s) -
Gross Jürgen H.,
Veith Hans H.
Publication year - 1993
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.1210280808
Subject(s) - iminium , ion , chemistry , chain (unit) , computational chemistry , organic chemistry , physics , astronomy
The metastable ion characteristics of N ‐alkyl‐ N ‐methylmethyleneiminium ions ( \documentclass{article}\pagestyle{empty}\begin{document}$ {\rm H}_2 {\rm C}=\!=\mathop {\rm N}\limits^ + ({\rm CH}_3){\rm R} $\end{document} , R = n ‐C m H 2 m + 1 , m = 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 14, 18) are reported and discussed. For R = n ‐propyl, alkene loss by onium reaction and alkene loss by McLafferty rearrangement occur, whereas for the higher homologues only the latter reaction is observed. As a result of 2 H and 13 C labelling experiments, the mechanism of alkene loss by γ‐H transfer and β‐cleavage does not change with increasing chain length and the iminium ions do not isomerize prior to decomposition, neither by H–D scrambling nor by carbon skeleton rearrangement. Whereas the sequence of elementary steps during fragmentation is not affected, the energetics of the reaction change as the chain length increases. Resulting from thermodynamic estimations, the enthalpy of reaction Δ H r , critical energy E 0 and reverse critical energy E 0r diminish markedly as R increases from n ‐propyl to n ‐octadecyl. The knowledge of the reaction energetics including kinetic energy release data allows information about partitioning of excess energy into internal and translational degrees of freedom to be deduced.

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