## Abstract The exchange reaction of carboxyl groups with carbon dioxide has been studied in thermal decomposition of aliphatic dicarboxylic acid disodium salts. It has been found that exchange takes place under given experimental conditions. In some cases the process results in considerable exchan
Acid generation in the thermal decomposition of diaryliodonium salts
โ Scribed by William E. McEwen; John W. DeMassa
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 523 KB
- Volume
- 7
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1042-7163
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โฆ Synopsis
Diphenyliodonium tetrafluoroborate and diphenyliodonium hexafluorophosphate have been found to generate u p to two equivalents of hydrogen fluoride per equivalent of the iodonium salt by pyrolysis at 239ยฐC in the neat state and at 150ยฐC in the presence of anisole or nitrobenzene. The formation of hydrogen fluoride is presumed to arise by dissociation o f hydrogen tetrafluoroborate or hydrogen hexafluorophosphate initially formed, due to the high temperatures, thusgiving rise also to the Lewis acids boron trifluoride and phosphorus pentafluoride, respectively. A detailed analysis of the volatile organic products of the decomposition of the diphenyliodonium salts was also cam'ed out. Many products were identified in all of the cases studied. For example, the neat decomposition of diphenyliodonium tetrafluoroborate afforded benzene, fluorobenzene, iodobenzene, the three isomeric iodobiphenyls, biphenyl, three isomeric terphenyls, and one or more of the diiodobiphenyls, iodoterphenyls, and polyaromatics. Among the iodobiphenyls, the ortho and para isomers were found to predominate over the meta isomer. The terphenyl isomers did not exhibit this ortho, para selectivity. It was significant that decomposition of'the diaryliodonium salts in anisole suspension did not afford methoxybiphenyls or iodomethoxybiphenyls. An interpretation of these results is presented.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The thermal decomposition of benzoylformic acid into carbon dioxide and benzaldehyde is a unimolecular first-order reaction which takes place according to the rate equation log k = 15.3-42,500/4.575 K. At 600 K the reaction takes place 18 times faster than the corresponding decomposition of pyruvic
The thermal decomposition of pyruvic acid into carbon dioxide and acetaldehyde is a unimolecular first-order reaction and takes place according to the rate equation. loyk 13.53--41.250,'4.575 K. These parameters contrast markedly with those recently reported. viz. logk = 7.19-27.700/4.575 K and conf