Kinetic isotope effect
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The kinetic isotope effect (KIE) is a variation in the reaction rate of a chemical reaction when an atom in one of the reactants is replaced by one of its isotopes. It is also called isotope fractionation, although this term is technically somewhat broader in meaning. A KIE involving hydrogen and deuterium is represented as:
with kH and kD reaction rate constants.
An isotopic substitution will greatly modify the reaction rate when the isotopic replacement is in a chemical bond that is broken or formed. In such a case, the rate change is termed a primary isotope effect. When the substitution is not involved in the bond that is breaking or forming, one may still observe a smaller rate change, termed a secondary isotope effect. Thus, the magnitude of the kinetic isotope effect can be used to elucidate the reaction mechanism. Isotope effects are most easily observed when they occur in the rate-determining step of a reaction. If other steps are partially rate-determining, the effect of isotopic substitution will be masked.
Isotopic rate changes are most pronounced when the relative mass change is greatest. For instance, changing a hydrogen atom to deuterium represents a 100% increase in mass, whereas in replacing carbon-12 with carbon-13, the mass increases by only 8%. The rate of a reaction involving a C-H bond is typically 6 to 10 times faster than the corresponding C-D bond, whereas a 12C reaction is only ~1.04 times faster than the corresponding 13C reaction (even though, in both cases, the isotope is one atomic mass unit heavier).
Isotopic substitution can modify the rate of reaction in a variety of ways. In many cases, the rate difference can be rationalized by noting that the mass of an atom affects the vibration frequency of the chemical bond that it forms, even if the electron configuration is nearly identical. Heavier atoms will (classically) lead to lower vibration frequencies, or, viewed quantum mechanically, will have lower zero-point energy. With a lower zero-point energy, more energy must be supplied to break the bond, resulting in a higher activation energy for bond cleavage, which in turn lowers the measured rate (see, for example, the Arrhenius equation).
The Swain equation relates the kinetic isotope effect for the proton/tritium combination with that of the proton/deuterium combination.
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[edit] Mathematical details in a diatomic molecule
One approach to studying the effect is for that of a diatomic molecule. The fundamental vibrational frequency (ν) of a chemical bond between atom A and B is, when approximated by a harmonic oscillator:
where k is the spring constant for the bond, and μ is the reduced mass of the A-B system:
(mi is the mass of atom i). Quantum mechanically, the energy of the n-th level of a harmonic oscillator is given by:
Thus, the zero-point energy (n = 0) will decrease as the reduced mass increases. With a lower zero-point energy, more energy is needed to overcome the activation energy for bond cleavage.
In changing a carbon-hydrogen bond to a carbon-deuterium bond, k remains unchanged, but the reduced mass µ is different. As a good approximation, on going from C-H to C-D, the reduced mass increases by a factor of approximately 2. Thus, the frequency for a C-D bond should be approximately 1/√2 or 0.71 times that of the corresponding C-H bond. Still, this is a much larger effect than changing the carbon-12 to carbon-13.
[edit] Applications
The kinetic isotope effect is applied in reaction mechanism elucidation, for instance in the halogenation of toluene [1]:
In this particular intramolecular KIE study the radical substitution of hydrogen by bromine is examined with mono-deuterated toluene (obtained by organic reduction of benzyl chloride with zinc and deuterated acetic acid) and N-bromosuccinimide. As hydrogen is replaced by bromine faster than deuterium, the reaction product gets enriched in deuterium. In order to analyze the deuterium composition by means of mass spectroscopy the reaction product is reduced back to toluene with lithium aluminum hydride and a KIE of 4.86 is calculated. This finding is in accordance with the general accepted view of a radical substitution in which a proton is removed by a bromine free radical species in the rate-determining step.
A large KIE of 5.56 is also reported for reaction of ketones with bromine and sodium hydroxide forming a haloketone with the α-carbonyl positions deuterated [2].
In this reaction the rate-limiting step is enolate formation by proton (deuterium) abstraction from the ketone by base. In this study the KIE is calculated from the reaction rate constants for regular 2,4-dimethyl-3-pentanone and its deuterated isomer by optical density measurements.
[edit] Tunneling
In some cases, an additional rate enhancement is seen for the lighter isotope, possibly due to quantum mechanical tunnelling. This is typically only observed for hydrogen atoms, which are light enough to exhibit significant tunnelling.
This effect has been observed in such reactions as the deprotonation and iodination of nitropropane with hindered pyridine base [3] with a reported KIE of 25 at 25°C:
and in a 1,5-sigmatropic hydrogen shift [4] although it is observed that it is difficult to extrapolate experimental values obtained at elevated temperatures to lower temperatures [5] [6]:
[edit] See also
- A pioneer in KIE research: Barton Hawkins
- A KIE researcher: Michael Kearney
- KIE is part of the wider field of Chemical kinetics
[edit] External links
- Testing a Mechanism: Kinetic Isotope Effects
- Primary Kinetic Isotope Effect
- Measuring Kinetic Isotope Effect of Carbon at Natural Abundance
- Kinetic Isotope Effects in Barrierless Reactions of CH Radicals
- Singleton Research Group
- Kinetic Isotope Effects in the Hydride Transfer Reaction of Xylose Isomerase
- Stable chlorine intramolecular kinetic isotope effects from the abiotic dehydrochlorination of DDT
[edit] References
- ^ The Deuterium Isotope Effect in the Side Chain Halogenation of Toluene Kenneth B. Wiberg and Lynn H. Slaugh J. Am. Chem. Soc.; 1958; 80(12) pp 3033 - 3039; DOI:10.1021/ja01545a034 10.1021/ja01545a034
- ^ Anomalous kinetic hydrogen isotope effects on the rat of ionization of some dialkyl substituted ketones R. A. Lynch, S. P. Vincenti, Y. T. Lin, L. D. Smucker, and S. C. Subba Rao J. Am. Chem. Soc.; 1972 94pp 8351 - 8356; DOI:10.1021/ja00779a012 10.1021/ja00779a012
- ^ Rates and isotope effects in the proton transfers from 2-nitropropane to pyridine bases Edward Sheldon Lewis and Lance Funderburk J. Am. Chem. Soc.; 1967; 89(10) pp 2322 - 2327; DOI:10.1021/ja00986a013
- ^ Mechanism of the 1,5-sigmatropic hydrogen shift in 1,3-pentadiene Michael J. S. Dewar, Eamonn F. Healy, and James M. Ruiz J. Am. Chem. Soc.; 1988; 110(8) pp 2666 - 2667; DOI:10.1021/ja00216a060
- ^ Effect on Kinetics by Deuterium in the 1,5-Hydrogen Shift of a Cisoid-Locked 1,3(Z)-Pentadiene, 2-Methyl-10-methylenebicyclo[4.4.0]dec-1-ene: Evidence for Tunneling? William von E. Doering and Xin Zhao J. Am. Chem. Soc.; 2006; 128(28) pp 9080 - 9085; (Article) DOI:10.1021/ja057377v
- ^ In this study the KIE is measured by sensitive proton NMR. The extrapolated KIE at 25°C is 16.6 but the margin of error is high