Kinetics of the reduction of 3-chloroacetophenone (CAF) with sodium borohydride (NaBH4) were followed by UV-vis spectroscopy at 27.0 °C in different reverse micellar media, toluene/BHDC/ water and toluene/AOT/water, and compared with results in an isooctane/AOT/water reverse micellar system. AOT is sodium 1,4-bis-2-ethylhexylsulfosuccinate, and BHDC is benzyl-n-hexadecyl dimethylammonium chloride. The kinetic profiles were investigated as a function of variables such as surfactant and NaBH4 concentration and the amount of water dispersed in the reverse micelles, W0 = [H2O]/[surfactant]. In all cases, the first-order rate constant, kobs, increases with the concentration of surfactant as a consequence of incorporating the substrate into the interface of the reverse micelles where the reaction takes place. The reaction is faster at the cationic interface than at the anionic one probably because the negative ion BH4 - is part of the cationic interface. The effect of the external solvent on the reaction shows that reduction is favored in the isooctane/ AOT/water reverse micellar system than that with an aromatic solvent. This is probably due to BH4 - being more in the water pool of the toluene/AOT/water reverse micellar system. The kinetic profile upon water addition depends largely on the type of interface. In the BHDC system, kobs increases with W0 in the whole range studied while in AOT the kinetic profile has a maximum at W0 ca. 5, probably reflecting the fact that BH4 - is part of the cationic interface while, in the anionic one, there is a strong interaction between water and the polar headgroup of AOT below W0 = 5 and, above that, BH4 - is repelled from the interface once the water pool has formed. Application of a kinetic model based on the pseudophase formalism, which considers the distribution of the ketone between the continuous medium and the interface and assumes that reaction takes place only at the interface, has enabled us to estimate rate constants at the interface of the reverse micellar systems. At W0 < 10, it was considered that NaBH4 is wholly at the interface and, at W0 >= 10, where there are free water molecules, also the partitioning between the interface and the water pool was taken into account. The results were used to evaluate CAF and NaBH4 distribution constants between the different pseudophases as well as the second-order reaction rate constant of the reduction reaction in the micellar interface.
Reverse Micellar Aggregates: Effect on Ketone Reduction. 2. Surfactant Role
CERICHELLI, GIORGIO
2004-01-01
Abstract
Kinetics of the reduction of 3-chloroacetophenone (CAF) with sodium borohydride (NaBH4) were followed by UV-vis spectroscopy at 27.0 °C in different reverse micellar media, toluene/BHDC/ water and toluene/AOT/water, and compared with results in an isooctane/AOT/water reverse micellar system. AOT is sodium 1,4-bis-2-ethylhexylsulfosuccinate, and BHDC is benzyl-n-hexadecyl dimethylammonium chloride. The kinetic profiles were investigated as a function of variables such as surfactant and NaBH4 concentration and the amount of water dispersed in the reverse micelles, W0 = [H2O]/[surfactant]. In all cases, the first-order rate constant, kobs, increases with the concentration of surfactant as a consequence of incorporating the substrate into the interface of the reverse micelles where the reaction takes place. The reaction is faster at the cationic interface than at the anionic one probably because the negative ion BH4 - is part of the cationic interface. The effect of the external solvent on the reaction shows that reduction is favored in the isooctane/ AOT/water reverse micellar system than that with an aromatic solvent. This is probably due to BH4 - being more in the water pool of the toluene/AOT/water reverse micellar system. The kinetic profile upon water addition depends largely on the type of interface. In the BHDC system, kobs increases with W0 in the whole range studied while in AOT the kinetic profile has a maximum at W0 ca. 5, probably reflecting the fact that BH4 - is part of the cationic interface while, in the anionic one, there is a strong interaction between water and the polar headgroup of AOT below W0 = 5 and, above that, BH4 - is repelled from the interface once the water pool has formed. Application of a kinetic model based on the pseudophase formalism, which considers the distribution of the ketone between the continuous medium and the interface and assumes that reaction takes place only at the interface, has enabled us to estimate rate constants at the interface of the reverse micellar systems. At W0 < 10, it was considered that NaBH4 is wholly at the interface and, at W0 >= 10, where there are free water molecules, also the partitioning between the interface and the water pool was taken into account. The results were used to evaluate CAF and NaBH4 distribution constants between the different pseudophases as well as the second-order reaction rate constant of the reduction reaction in the micellar interface.Pubblicazioni consigliate
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