Erratum to "The mechanism and thermodynamics of transesterification of acetate-ester enolates in the gas phase1" [Int. J. Mass Spectrom. Ion Process. 172 (1998) 25]2

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Abstract

In solution, base-catalyzed hydrolysis and transesterification of esters are initiated by hydroxide- or alkoxide-ion attack at the carbonyl carbon. At low pressures in the gas phase, however, transesterification proceeds by an attack of the enolate anion of an acetate ester on an alcohol. Fourier transform mass spectrometry (FTMS) indicates that the reaction is the second-order process: -CH2-CO2-R + R'-OH → -CH2-CO2-R' + R-OH and there is little to no detectable production of either alkoxide anion. Labeling studies show that the product and reactant enolate anion esters undergo exchange of hydrogens located a to the carbonyl carbon with the deuterium of R'-OD. The extent of the H/D exchange increases with reaction time, pointing to a short-lived intermediate. The alcoholysis reaction rate constants increase with increasing acidity of the primary, straight-chained alkyl alcohols, whereas steric effects associated with branched alcohols cause the rate constants to decrease. Equilibrium constants, which were determined directly from measurements at equilibrium and which were calculated from the forward and reverse rate constants, are near unity and show internal consistency. In the absence of steric effects, the larger enolate is always the favored product at equilibrium. The intermediate for the transesterification reaction, which can be eenerated at a few tenths of a torr in a tandem mass soectrometer. is tetrahedral. but other adducts that are collisionally stabilized under these conditions are principally loosely bound complexes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)243
Number of pages1
JournalInternational Journal of Mass Spectrometry
Volume173
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1998

Keywords

  • Fourier transform mass spoctrometry
  • Gas-phase kinetics
  • Transesterification of ester enolates: Gas-phase equilibria

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