Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.127, No.20, 7615-7631, 2005
Modeling rate-controlling solvent effects. The pericyclic meisenheimer rearrangement of N-propargylmorpholine N-oxide
The activation parameters of the pericyclic Meisenheimer rearrangement and a competitive rearrangement of N-propargylmorpholine N-oxide were determined by experimental and computational methods. A number of aprotic and protic solvents of different polarities and hydrogen bond-forming abilities and the roles of electron-pair acceptor additives were investigated. The reaction kinetics were followed by means of NMR. In protic solvents, isotope-labeling experiments revealed a novel inverse secondary kinetic isotope effect (k(H)/k(D) about 0.8) for the rate-determining cyclization step, probably occurring because of a C(Sp) -> C(sp(2)) change in hybridization at the reaction center. In molecular computations at the B3LYP/6-31 ++G(d,p) level of theory, implicit, explicit, and joint explicit-implicit solvent models were used. The explicit-implicit model and molecular dynamic simulations gave the most accurate results. The components of the rate-controlling solvent effect are discussed, and general equations are proposed for accurate prediction of the solvent-dependent activation parameters.