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  • Theoretical studies on identity S(N)2 reactions of lithium halide and methyl halide: a microhydration model.

Theoretical studies on identity S(N)2 reactions of lithium halide and methyl halide: a microhydration model.

Journal of molecular modeling (2010-03-23)
Shiyuan Zheng, Yan Xiong, Jinyue Wang
ABSTRACT

Reactions of lithium halide (LiX, X = F, Cl, Br and I) and methyl halide (CH₃X, X = F, Cl, Br and I) have been investigated at the B3LYP/6-31G(d) level of theory using the microhydration model. Beginning with hydrated lithium ion, four or two water molecules have been conveniently introduced to these aqueous-phase halogen-exchange S(N)2 reactions. These water molecules coordinated with the center metal lithium ion, and also interacted with entering and leaving halogen anion via hydrogen bond in complexes and transition state, which to some extent compensated hydration of halogen anion. At 298 K the reaction profiles all involve central barriers ΔE ( cent ) which are found to decrease in the order F > Cl > Br > I. The same trend is also found for the overall barriers (ΔE(ovr)) of the title reaction. In the S(N)2 reaction of sodium iodide and methyl iodide, the activation energy agrees well with the aqueous conductometric investigation.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Bromuro di litio, ReagentPlus®, ≥99%
Supelco
Chloromethane solution, 200 μg/mL in methanol, analytical standard
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Lithium bromide solution, 54 wt. % in H2O
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Chloromethane solution, 1.0 M in tert-butyl methyl ether, anhydrous
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Bromuro di litio, powder and chunks, ≥99.995% trace metals basis
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Bromuro di litio, AnhydroBeads, −10 mesh, 99.999% trace metals basis
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Chloromethane solution, 1.0 M in diethyl ether
Sigma-Aldrich
Bromuro di litio, AnhydroBeads, −10 mesh, ≥99.9% trace metals basis