The decomposition reactions of N-bromodiethanolamine. N-bromoethylethanolamine, and AT-bromomethylethanolamine in aqueous solution have been studied kineticall) under various experimental conditions. The results support a proposed reaction mechanism in which the rate controlling step is assumed to b
Kinetics and mechanism of the decomposition of N-brominated alanine in aqueous solution
β Scribed by William D. Stanbro; Michael J. Lenkevich
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 356 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0538-8066
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Aqueous bromine reacts with alkyl-sidechain a-amino acids through a series of steps resulting in the formation of the corresponding alkyl aldelydes and nitriles. The kinetics and the mechanism of the interaction of bromine with alanine are examined. The products and the rates of this reaction are dependent in a complex way on the initial reactant concentration and pH. Acetaldeyde production is favored a t low bromine-to-alanine ratios, low bromine concentrations, and pH values above 6. The first-order rate constant for the formation of acetaldelyde from alanine under these conditions is kq = 1.98 X 1015 e-22,500/RT min-I. At higher concentration the nitrile is formed through a bromoimine intermediate. Under most conditions the nitrile appears to form from a catalyzed decomposition of the bromoimine which is too fast to be followed by the methods used in this study. However, residual amounts of the bromoimine decay by a slower first-order mechanism. The rate constant for this slower reaction in the case of alanine a t pH 6.8-6.9 and alanine concentrations of 1 X lO-4M is k6 = 1.75 X 105 e-10.400IRT min-1,
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract **BACKGROUND:** Chloronitrobenzenes (ClNBs) are a family of toxic and bioβresistant organic compounds. Ozone treatment is specifically suitable for partial or complete oxidation of nonβbiodegradable components. However, few studies on the decomposition of ClNBs by ozone are available, a
At 298 K the rate constant for the decomposition of N-chloroleucine has the constant value 3.20 >: lo-\* s-' over the range pH 5-12, increases with increasing acidity at pH < 5, and increases with pH a t pH > 12. A mechanism is put forward which explains these results.
The degradation kinetics and mechanism of a potent new cephalosporin, cefotaxime sodium, in aqueous solution were investigated at pH 0-10 at 25 degrees and an ionic strength of 0.5. The degradation rates were determined by high-pressure liquid chromatography and were observed to follow pseudo first-