Computational Insights into the Mechanism of Boyland-Sims Oxidation Reaction

Authors

  • Isaac Hall Fairmont State University
  • Jojo Joseph Fairmont State University
  • Edward Behrman Ohio State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55632/pwvas.v96i1.1098

Abstract

The Boyland-Sims oxidation is the reaction between peroxydisulfate ions and arylamines to form the aryl amine ortho sulfate with minor para isomer. The long-standing mechanism involves a nucleophilic attack by the amine on peroxide oxygen to form arylhydroxylamine-O-sulfonate intermediate, which subsequently rearranges to the arylamine o-sulfate. Marjanović et al. have challenged this long-standing mechanism, proposing a nitrenium ion intermediate as the reactive species instead of the uncharged amine. The nitrenium ion proposal was based on relatively low-level calculations. We previously computed the energetics of reaction intermediates in both mechanisms for aniline, 2,4-dinitroaniline, and N,N-dimethylaniline using high-level of density functional theory (B3LYP/6-311++G**) calculations. We present here new computations using density functional theory (B3LYP/6-311++G**) to model both arylhydroxylamine-O-sulfonate and nitrenium ion pathways in a series of aromatic amines. The transition state calculations revealed two possible energetically feasible pathways for the rearrangement of arylhydroxylamine-O-sulfonate to arylamine o-sulfate. Additionally, we computationally modeled the feasibility of the reaction of aniline and tetrathionate to yield 2-aminothiophenol product via Boyland-Sims Oxidation reaction. The results indicate tetrathionate ion is less reactive with aniline than the peroxydisulfate ion.

Author Biography

Jojo Joseph, Fairmont State University

Chair Department of Natural Sciences

Published

2024-04-18

How to Cite

Hall, I., Joseph, J., & Behrman, E. (2024). Computational Insights into the Mechanism of Boyland-Sims Oxidation Reaction. Proceedings of the West Virginia Academy of Science, 96(1). https://doi.org/10.55632/pwvas.v96i1.1098

Issue

Section

Meeting Abstracts-Poster