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Theoretical Study of the Reaction Mechanism of Phenol-Epoxy Ring-Opening Reaction Using a Latent Hardening Accelerator and a Reactivity Evaluation by Substituents.

Ryusuke MitaniHidetoshi YamamotoMichinori Sumimoto
Published in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
The mechanism of the phenol-epoxide ring-opening reaction using tetraphenylphosphonium-tetraphenylborate (TPP-K) was investigated using the density functional theory (DFT) method. The reaction was initiated by breaking the P-B bond of TPP-K. The generated tetraphenylborate (TetraPB - ) reacted with phenol to form a phenoxide ion, which combined with tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP + ) to produce the active species, i.e., tetraphenylphosphonium phenolate (TPP-OPh). The phenoxide ion in TPP-OPh nucleophilically attacked the epoxide. Simultaneously, the H atom in the phenolic OH group moved to the O atom of the ring-opened epoxide. The formed phenoxide ion bound to TPP + again, and TPP-OPh was regenerated. The rate-determining steps in the reaction were the cleavage of the P-B bond and the triphenylborane-forming reaction. The free energies of activation were calculated to be 36.3 and 36.1 kcal/mol, respectively. It is also suggested that these values in the rate-determining steps could be manipulated by substituents introduced on the Ph group of TetraPB - . Based on these results, it is possible to construct new design guidelines for latent hardening accelerators such as TPP-K.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • electron transfer
  • molecular dynamics
  • mass spectrometry
  • dna binding