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Temperature-Dependent Effects of Alkyl Substitution on Diarylamine Antioxidant Reactivity.

Ron ShahJia-Fei PoonEvan A HaidaszDerek A Pratt
Published in: The Journal of organic chemistry (2021)
Alkylated diphenylamines are among the most efficacious radical-trapping antioxidants (RTAs) for applications at elevated temperatures since they are able to trap multiple radical equivalents due to catalytic cycles involving persistent diphenylnitroxide and diphenylaminyl radical intermediates. We have previously shown that some heterocyclic diarylamine RTAs possess markedly greater efficacy than typical alkylated diphenylamines, and herein, report on our efforts to identify optimal alkyl substitution of the scaffold, which we had found to be the ideal compromise between reactivity and stability. Interestingly, the structure-activity relationships differ dramatically with temperature: para-alkyl substitution slightly increased reactivity and stoichiometry at 37 and 100 °C due to more favorable (stereo)electronic effects and corresponding diarylaminyl/diarylnitroxide formation, while ortho-alkyl substitution slightly decreased both reactivity and stoichiometry. No such trends were evident at 160 °C; instead, the compounds were segregated into two groups based on the presence/absence of benzylic C-H bonds. Electron spin resonance spectroscopy indicates that increased efficacy was associated with lesser diarylnitroxide formation, and deuterium-labeling suggests that this is due to abstraction of the benzylic H atom, precluding nitroxide formation. Computations predict that this reaction path is competitive with established fates of the diarylaminyl radical, thereby minimizing the formation of off-cycle products and leading to significant gains in high-temperature RTA efficacy.
Keyphrases
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  • high temperature
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