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Proximity Effects in Mass Spectra of Benzanilides.

Nathan W FenwickAmie SaidykhanYasser NazirRichard TelfordBinyaameen MasoodWilliam H C MartinRichard T GallagherRichard D Bowen
Published in: European journal of mass spectrometry (Chichester, England) (2021)
The analytical value of peaks arising by a proximity effect in the electron ionization mass spectra of benzanilides has been established by examining the spectra of numerous examples of general structure XC6H4NHCOC6H4Y. Significant [M-X]+ signals are observed only when X = Cl, Br, I or CH3O in the 2-position. The presence of strong [M-X]+ signals, but negligibly weak [M-Y]+ peaks, even when the C-Y bond would be expected to break more readily than the C-X bond, indicates that these diagnostically useful signals do not arise by simple cleavage. Similarly, the presence of an appreciable [M-Cl]+ signal, but no [M-Br]+ signal, in the spectra of representative examples of 4-Br-2ClC6H3NHCOC6H4Y, reveals that loss of a substituent from the 2-position occurs much more rapidly than fission of a weaker bond to a substituent in the 4-position. These trends are interpreted in terms of cyclization of the ionized 2-substituted benzanilide, followed by elimination of the substituent originally in the 2-position, to form a protonated 2-arylbenzoxazole.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • cross sectional
  • molecular docking
  • room temperature
  • electron transfer
  • tandem mass spectrometry