Hammett Correlations and Their Applications in Elucidating Reaction Mechanism
Hammett Correlations and Their Applications in Elucidating Reaction Mechanism
Ph Ph
OH2 NH2
N H HN
k1 k2 O
Yn
Yn Yn Ph H
3.3
3.2 m-OMe
unsub p-Cl
3.1
m-Cl
3
p-Me m-Me
log kob s 2.9
2.8 m-NO2
2.7
p-OMe
2.6
2.5
-0.4 -0.2 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8
!
Outline:
- The development of the Hammett equation
Key References:
Isaacs, N. Physical Organic Chemistry; Wiley: New York, 1995; Ch. 4.
Hansch, C.; Leo, A.; Taft, R. W. Chem. Rev. 1991, 91, 165. (tons of values)
Lowry, T. H.; Schuller Richardson, K. Mechanism and Theory in Organic Chemistry; Harper and Row: New York, 1987;
pp 143-159.
Exner, O. The Hammett Equation. In Advances in Linear Free Energy Relationships; Chapman, N. B. and Shorter, J.,
Eds.; Plenum Press: London, 1972; Ch. 1.
2
The First Designation of Substituent Constants
O O
H H
KA
O O H H
O O
H 25 °C
Y H
Y
electrophile nucleophile
Y KA pKA log KA !
= log KY - log K0
Cl 1.00 x 10-4 4.00 -4.00 0.20
K0 : unsubstituted acid
Me 4.27 x 10-5 4.37 -4.37 -0.17
- Numbers tabulated for a variety of meta (!m ) and para (!p ) substituted benzoic acids
kY : rate of reaction for substituted benzene ring Therefore, this is a LINEAR FREE ENERGY RELATIONSHIP.
": substituent constant Since the relationship between free energy and !" is linear (for all
reactions run at constant T), !H‡ and !S‡ cannot be independent.
(One consequence: ortho-substitution cannot obey the Hammett
equation due to highly variable entropies from reaction to reaction.)
" !
- Measurement of capacity to perturb electronic - Measurement of sensitivity of reaction to electronic
environment perturbation
3
A Simple Example: Basic Hydrolysis of Esters
O O
-
OEt OH , k O EtOH
Y Y
Y ! k (M-1 s-1 )
2.5
Cl 0.24 2.10 kY 1
log p-Cl
kH
H 0.00 0.289 0.5
m: slope
y = mx + b
b: y-intercept
16
Logarithm Rules: 14
4 y = 2x + 3
2
(m = 2, b = 3)
0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
": x-variable
kY Most people will plot " vs. log (kY /k0).
log = !"
k0 log kY : y-variable
Therefore, the y-intercept is meaningless,
= log kY - log k0 log k0 : y-intercept and only the slope of the line will give
information.
log kY = !" + log k0 !: slope
4
What Contributes to !?
Classical inductive
effect (through-bond)
"#
"+ NMe3
""+
"#
MeO O MeO O
Field effect
"# (through-space)
Through-bond evidence:
O n 0 1 2 3
Through-space evidence:
Me2 N NMe2
Electron-withdrawing groups: +! deuterates
(H2C)2 (CH2)2 105 slower
Electron-donating groups: #! than
O O
H , H2 O
OR OH
Yn Yn ROH
R = Me
R = i-Pr 65 °C in 100% H2 SO4
0 °C in 98.7% H2SO 4 with H[B(HSO4 )4 ]
0 -2
-2.5 -4
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6
! !
Hopkinson, A. C. J. Chem. Soc. B 1969, 203.
5
Magnitude of ! Value can be Important
5
! = 1.26
p-NO2
O O 4.5
NaOH, H2 O
OMe OH 4 p-Br
125 °C
Y Y log k125° 3.5
p-NH2 unsub
3 p-Me
2.5
2
-1 -0.5 0 0.5 1
Recall:
"
Hypothesis:
O O
O
OH
OEt OH
O OH
Y Y
! = 2.54 Y
Smaller ! value, therefore electronic effect
consistent with: O is more removed from benzene ring.
OEt 18
O studies confirmed mechanism
Y
(Note ortho-substitution--ok for comparison
OH
purposes only!)
Goering, H. L.; Rubin, T.; Newman, M. S. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1954, 76, 787.
O O
!
KA water, 25 °C 1.00
OH O
Yn H2O Yn H3O 50% aq. EtOH 1.52
O O
OH
OH Yn OH
Yn O Yn
O O
OH OH
Yn Yn
! = 0.466 ! = 0.256
(transmission thru (transmission thru 2
"-system better) pathways better than 1)
6
Magnitude of ! can be Important (other cases-compensating effects)
O O
Br OH
Yn OH Yn Br ! = -0.33
Attack of hydroxide facilitated by EWG, but bromide leaving facilitated by EDG. Effects cancel,
leaving a small reaction constant.
I
Yn EtO Yn EtOH I ! = 2.07
Deprotonation assisted by EWG, but iodide leaving assisted by EDG. However, compensating
effect of halide release is small due to more remote positioning.
via:
Correlations are not that good,
Yn especially with para substitution
meta-substitution para-substitution
-3 0
OMe
-3.5 Me
-1 SMe
unsub
t-Bu SMe
-4
-2
Me
-4.5 OMe
-3 t-Bu F
-5
log k CO2Me
log k -4
unsub
-5.5 F Cl
Cl Br -5 Br
-6
CN -6
-6.5 CF3
NO2 CO2Me CN
-7 -7 CF3 NO2
-7.5 -8
-0.2 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 -0.4 -0.2 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1
! !
7
Brown Introduces !+
!+ Applications
O
Benzylic alcohol oxidation:
S NHCl
O
O
OH CAB, HClO 4
Yn H Chloramine B (CAB)
Yn
50% aq. AcOH
25 °C
OH
slow OH OH
Ar H Cl NHSO2 Ph
H Ar Ar H
8
!+ Applications
O
H dimethylketene,
AlCl3
Yn CHMe2 " + = -6.6
Yn
Dramatic effects and high correlations can be seen when reaction center is on ring.
HBR2 BR2
Yn " + = -0.49
Yn
EDG will accelerate attack on boron, while EWG will facilitate hydride addition at the benzylic carbon. Effects
will cancel each other out.
N
N N N
N3
N3 Yn " + = 3.7
Yn
Positive reaction constant due to cationic intermediate in the reactant rather than the product.
NH2
Analogous modification of
the Hammett Equation for H -H
+
N
anionic centers: S
kY Yn O2 + H+
log = !- "-
k0
NH2
N
Values determined based on several S
reactions involving phenols and Yn O2
anilines (anionic in transition state).
-5.5 -5.5
-6 -6
-6.5 -6.5
p-NO2
-7 -7
p-SO2NH2 p-CN
log -7.5
log -7.5
KNH p-COMe KNH
-8 -8
-8.5 -8.5
-9 -9
-9.5 -9.5
-10 -10
-0.4 -0.2 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 -0.5 0 0.5 1 1.5
" "-
+
Values much closer to " values than " is to ". Only noticeable difference is in highly EWG in para positions.
Yoshioka, M.; Hamamoto, K.; Kubota, T. Bull. Chem. Soc. Jpn. 1962, 35, 1723.
9
Reconciliation Between !, !+ , and !-: The Yukawa-Tsuno Equation
For all practical purposes, the three parameters (!, !+, and !-) are satisfactory for correlating reactions.
Attempts have been made, however, to quantify the contributions between "normal" and "enhanced" resonance effects.
Yukawa-Tsuno Equation
r = 0.00 for benzoic acid hydrolysis
kY
log = "(! + r(!+ # !)) r = 1.00 for cumyl chloride hydrolysis (how !+ was defined)
kH
3
O
2
H 1
Yn Yn
log krel
H2O 0
-1
r = 0.81: value indicates a largely-developed cation
as the intermediate -2
-3
-0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0 0.2 0.4 0.6
! + 0.81(!+ # !)
Yukawa, Y.; Tsuno, Y. Bull. Chem. Soc. Jpn. 1959, 32, 971.
Br Br
acetone N
Yn Yn
N
Two possibilites:
0.25
1) Gradual change in transition state
structure 0.2
0.15
vs. Ar N
Ar Br 0.1
kY
log 0.05
reagent-like product-like
ts ts k0
0
10
Deviations from Hammett Correlations-Concave Down
Ph Ph
H OH2 NH2
N HN
k1 k2 O
Yn
Yn Yn Ph H
3.3
3.2 m-OMe
A concave down Hammett curve is indicative
of a change in rate determining step. unsub p-Cl
3.1
m-Cl
3
p-Me m-Me
Electron-rich groups will assist in step 1, log kob s 2.9
making step 2 rate-limiting.
2.8 m-NO2
2.5
-0.4 -0.2 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8
!
Hoffmann, J.; Klicnar, J.; Sterba, V.; Vecera, M. Coll. Czech. Chem. Commun. 1970, 35, 1387.
Y OH k1 k2
Y OH2 Y k3
k-1 k-2 Y
X X X
X Z
Z Z Z
visible by UV visible by UV
0
Right side of plot: Ionization to carbocation
is rate limiting. Not surprising, since EWG
-0.5
cannot stabilize this structure.
log kob s
-1
Left side of plot: EDG can stabilize the
carbocation through induction and/or -1.5
resonance.
-2
Positive " + since the cation is the reactant k2 : rds
k3 : rds
(as in the aryldiazo-azide case) -2.5
-2 -1.5 -1 -0.5 0 0.5 1
!+ !
11
New Models for Quantitative Analysis of Substitution Patterns
Relatively unused by experimental chemists--either poor correlations across reactions or too complex to be practical
However, physical organic chemists sought to solidly divide substituents into separate resonance and inductive
components
Wells, P. R.; Ehrenson, S.; Taft, R. W. Prog. Phys. Org. Chem. 1968, 6, 147.
COOH
Y Y
kY
log = #I "I + #R "R
kH
Note: even though this equation has two variable parameters, the correlation can be displayed in a linear graph
via linear combinations.
The dual-parameter approach has been moderately effective in correlations involving ortho substituents, and
reactions through heterocyclic, olefinic, and aliphatic cores.
Refs available in Isaacs, N. Physical Organic Chemistry ; Wiley: New York, 1995; pp 175-180.
12
Mechanistic Studies of Oxidative Addition
Previously reported:
Pd(PPh3 )4
Ph3 P Proceeds with 95%
Br Br Pd inversion
H H
Me Ph3 P Me
Lau, K. S. Y.; Wong, P. K.; Stille, J. K. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1976, 98, 5832.
R "nonionic"
M
X
Path 1
RX M0 R MII X
Path 2
RX MI R , MIX
"ionic"
Not to be ignored...
M
X M X
X
" value for this reaction is nearly identical in THF. 0.4 p-Cl
13
Attempts to Explain Better Heck Catalysts via Hammett Correlations
(o-tol)3 P Ar (o-tol)3 P Br Ar
+ OAc
Pd Pd Pd
AcO Br Ar Br P(o-tol)3
catalyst 2
Hypothesis:
Pd
is the intermediate doing oxidative addition. The Pd-C bond is not broken.
P
Ar2
OH O 2+ O N N
(TMC)Ru (BF 4 )2 TMC:
Xn Yn O Xn Yn N N
CH3 CN, 40 °C
! = -1.44 1,4,8,11-tetramethyl-
1,4,8,11-tetraazacyclotetradecane
Did not correlate well with "+ values, unlike most other oxidations. Therefore, a more concerted process that
doesn't invoke an #-carbocation is likely involved.
2+
O 2+ O
HO
(TMC)Ru CAr2 (TMC)Ru O CHAr2
O H O H
OH +
2+ OH
O (TMC)Ru
CAr2
(TMC)Ru O CHAr2 O
OH
Wang, Z.; Chandler, W. D.; Lee, D. G. Can. J. Chem. 1998, 76, 919.
14
Hammett Plots in the Oxidative Kinetic Resolution
O
1.7 mol % (sparteine)PdCl 2
OH 50 mol % sparteine H
Yn Yn
DCE, 1 atm O2 , 50 °C
(At high sparteine concentration, #-hydride elimination was found to be rate limiting.)
0.5 0.5
" = -1.41 ± 0.15 " + = -1.00 ± 0.13
0 0
p-OMe p-OMe
-0.5 unsub -0.5 p-Me unsub
p-Me
log kob s -1 log kob s -1
p-CF3 p-CF3
m-OMe m-OMe
-1.5 -1.5
m-F m-F
p-NO2 p-NO2
-2 -2
-2.5 -2.5
-0.4 -0.2 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 -1 -0.5 0 0.5 1
! !+
"The calculated " and " + values...indicate that substituents influence the rate of both induction and resonance. The
negative " value signifies a positive charge buildup in the transition state consistent with #-hydride elimination
being rate limiting at high [sparteine]. The negative " + value specifies that direct resonance donation stabilizes
the positive charge buildup at the benzylic center during rate-limiting #-hydride elimination at high [sparteine]."
15