Journal article
Journal of Organic Chemistry, 2021
APA
Click to copy
Neal, M., Hejnosz, S. L., Rohde, J., Evanseck, J., & Montgomery, T. D. (2021). Multi-Ion Bridged Pathway of N-Oxides to 1,3-Dipole Dilithium Oxide Complexes. Journal of Organic Chemistry.
Chicago/Turabian
Click to copy
Neal, M., Sarah L Hejnosz, J. Rohde, J. Evanseck, and Thomas D. Montgomery. “Multi-Ion Bridged Pathway of N-Oxides to 1,3-Dipole Dilithium Oxide Complexes.” Journal of Organic Chemistry (2021).
MLA
Click to copy
Neal, M., et al. “Multi-Ion Bridged Pathway of N-Oxides to 1,3-Dipole Dilithium Oxide Complexes.” Journal of Organic Chemistry, 2021.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{m2021a,
title = {Multi-Ion Bridged Pathway of N-Oxides to 1,3-Dipole Dilithium Oxide Complexes.},
year = {2021},
journal = {Journal of Organic Chemistry},
author = {Neal, M. and Hejnosz, Sarah L and Rohde, J. and Evanseck, J. and Montgomery, Thomas D.}
}
Roussi's landmark work on the generation of 1,3-dipoles from tertiary amine N-oxides has not reached its full potential since its underlying mechanism is neither well explored nor understood. Two competing mechanisms were previously proposed to explain the transformation involving either an iminium ion or a diradical intermediate. Our investigation has revealed an alternative mechanistic pathway that explains experimental results and provides significant insights to guide the creation of new N-oxide reagents beyond tertiary alkylamines for direct synthetic transformations. Truhlar's M06-2x functional and Møller-Plesset second-order perturbation theory with Dunning's [jul,aug]-cc-pv[D,T]z basis sets and discrete-continuum solvation models were employed to determine activation enthalpies and structures. During these mechanistic explorations, we discovered a unique multi-ion bridged pathway resulting from the rate-determining step, which was energetically more favorable than other alternate mechanisms. This newly proposed mechanism contains no electrophilic intermediates, strengthening the reaction potential by broadening the reagent scope and limiting the possible side reactions. This thoroughly defined general mechanism supports a more direct route for improving the use of N-oxides in generating azomethine ylide-dilithium oxide complexes with expanded functional group tolerance and breadth of chemistry.