Quantum chemical studies of azoles


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Abstract

The results of theoretical search for model transition states of the electrophilic substitution reaction in 2H-tetrazole (1) without the preliminary formation of N-protonated azolium salts are presented for two routes that were previously suggested by the authors and thermodynamically investigated: A, the attack of molecule 1 by the nucleophile (HO(aq)) to form the anion to which the electrophile H3O+(aq)) is added and B, the attack of molecule 1 by the same electrophile followed by the addition of the same nucleophile to the specifically solvated protonated species formed in the preceding reaction step. The calculations were performed using the DFT/B3LYP/6-31G(d) method and the scanning procedure of the potential energy surface (PES). Both steps of route A turned out to be nearly barrierless, while in route B only its first step is barrierless and the second one is conjugated with passing an activation barrier of ∼45 kcal mol–1 between non-interacting or weakly interacting reactants and electrophilic substitution products. Unlike the specifically solvated protonated species of 1H-tetrazole in an aqueous solution, a similar species of 2H-tetrazole does not form a prereaction complex with the attacking nucleophile (HO(aq)) and the five-membered ring is destroyed in fact in the nitrogen-containing reaction product formed after passing the activation barrier. The optimized structure of the transition state differs strongly from the nitrogen-containing structure of the reaction product with the destroyed ring, which was found by scanning of the PES.

About the authors

N. D. Chuvylkin

N. D. Zelinsky Institute of Organic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences

Email: libel31@mail.ru
Russian Federation, 47 Leninsky prosp., Moscow, 119991

A. N. Subbotin

N. D. Zelinsky Institute of Organic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences

Email: libel31@mail.ru
Russian Federation, 47 Leninsky prosp., Moscow, 119991

S. A. Belov

N. D. Zelinsky Institute of Organic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences

Email: libel31@mail.ru
Russian Federation, 47 Leninsky prosp., Moscow, 119991

L. I. Belen´kii

N. D. Zelinsky Institute of Organic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences

Author for correspondence.
Email: libel31@mail.ru
Russian Federation, 47 Leninsky prosp., Moscow, 119991


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