In the presence of a low concentration (<O.Ol mol dm-3) of sulfuric acid, ethanol undergoes rapid and selective dehydration to ethene in supercritical water. The kinetics of this reaction are consistent with an acid-catalyzed E2 mechanism.
Reactions of diphenylether in supercritical water — mechanism and kinetics
✍ Scribed by J.M.L Penninger; R.J.A Kersten; H.C.L Baur
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 312 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0896-8446
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✦ Synopsis
Diphenylether (DPE ) interacts with supercritical water at temperatures of 415-480°C and forms reaction products which change with the water density. At low water density, from 0 to approximately 0.3 g/cc, the conversion of DPE decreases gradually. Products are typical for radical-type polycondensation reactions, i.e. diphenyl, phenyl-DPE, phenoxy-diphenyl, etc. At water densities greater than 0.4 g/cc these products vanish, the conversion of DPE increases again and forms phenol as sole reaction product.
This component indicates ionic hydrolysis as the governing chemistry. Validation of the data from high water density measurements support an S N 1 proton-catalyzed mechanism for the hydrolysis of DPE. Strong effects of water density become apparent on protonation of DPE and on ionic dissociation of phenol, as regards the negative values of the reaction volumes of these equilibria.
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