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How Solvation Influences the S N 2 versus E2 Competition.

Thomas HansenJasper C RoozeeFriedrich Matthias BickelhauptTrevor A Hamlin
Published in: The Journal of organic chemistry (2021)
We have quantum chemically investigated how solvation influences the competition between the S N 2 and E2 pathways of the model F - + C 2 H 5 Cl reaction. The system is solvated in a stepwise manner by going from the gas phase, then via microsolvation of one to three explicit solvent molecules, then last to bulk solvation using relativistic density functional theory at (COSMO)-ZORA-OLYP/QZ4P. We explain how and why the mechanistic pathway of the system shifts from E2 in the gas phase to S N 2 upon strong solvation of the Lewis base (i.e., nucleophile/protophile). The E2 pathway is preferred under weak solvation of the system by dichloromethane, whereas a switch in reactivity from E2 to S N 2 is observed under strong solvation by water. Our activation strain and Kohn-Sham molecular orbital analyses reveal that solvation of the Lewis base has a significant impact on the strength of the Lewis base. We show how strong solvation furnishes a weaker Lewis base that is unable to overcome the high characteristic distortivity associated with the E2 pathway, and thus the S N 2 pathway becomes viable.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics
  • density functional theory
  • ionic liquid
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • quantum dots