posted on 2024-04-05, 21:43authored byYunfan Qiu, Lili Du, Sarah D. Cady, David Lee Phillips, Arthur H. Winter
Nitrenium ions are important reactive intermediates participating
in the synthetic chemistry and biological processes. Little is known
about triplet phenyl nitrenium ions regarding their reactivity, lifetimes,
spectroscopic features, and electronic configurations, and no ground
state triplet nitrenium ion has been directly detected. In this work, <i>m</i>-pyrrolidinyl-phenyl hydrazine hydrochloride (<b>1</b>) is synthesized as the photoprecursor to photochemically generate
the corresponding <i>m</i>-pyrrolidinyl-phenyl nitrenium
ion (<b>2</b>), which is computed to adopt a π, π*
triplet ground state. A combination of femtosecond (fs) and nanosecond
(ns) transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy, cryogenic continuous-wave
electronic paramagnetic resonance (CW-EPR) spectroscopy, computational
analysis, and photoproduct studies was performed to elucidate the
photolysis pathway of <b>1</b> and offers the first direct experimental
detection of a ground state triplet phenyl nitrenium ion. Upon photoexcitation, <b>1</b> forms S1, where bond heterolysis occurs and the NH<sub>3</sub> leaving group is extruded in 1.8 ps, generating a vibrationally
hot, spin-conserving closed-shell singlet phenyl nitrenium ion (<sup>1</sup><b>2</b>) that undergoes vibrational cooling in 19 ps.
Subsequent intersystem crossing takes place in 0.5 ns, yielding the
ground state triplet phenyl nitrenium ion (<sup>3</sup><b>2</b>), with a lifetime of 0.8 μs. Unlike electrophilic singlet
phenyl nitrenium ions, which react rapidly with nucleophiles, this
triplet phenyl nitrenium reacts through sequential H atom abstractions,
resulting in the eventual formation of the reduced <i>m</i>-pyrrolidinyl-aniline as the predominant stable photoproduct. Supporting
the triplet ground state, continuous irradiation of <b>1</b> in a glassy matrix at 80 K in an EPR spectrometer forms a paramagnetic
triplet species, consistent with a triplet nitrenium ion.