Gas-Phase Smiles Rearrangement of ortho-Nitro-substituted Diaryliodonium
Cations and Their Mechanistic Insights
Abstract
Rationale: Diaryliodonium salts are useful electrophilic
reagents in organic chemistry, finding extensive applications in
arylations and photo-induced polymerizations. However, the comprehensive
mechanistic investigations, particularly concerning the mass
spectrometric behaviors of diaryliodonium salts, are relatively scarce
in the literatures. Methods: Diaryliodonium salts could be
readily ionized in ESI-MS to give [Ar 1-I
+-Ar 2], and the high-resolution
ESI-MS/MS experiments were conducted to investigate their gas-phase
chemical reactions. Results: Investigations on ESI-MS/MS of
[Ar 1-I +-Ar
2] revealed two major fragmentation patterns: 1)
Reductive elimination resulting the diaryl coupling product ion [Ar
1-Ar 2] +• by
the loss of I. 2) Generating aryl cations [Ar 1]
+ or [Ar 2] +
through cleavage of the C–I bonds. We unrevealed that the introduction
of NO 2 into Ar 2 of [Ar
1-I +-Ar 2]
could lead to an unexpected fragmentation ion [Ar
1O] + in MS/MS, arising from an
O-atom transfer process from NO 2 to Ar
1. Particularly, when NO 2 was
ortho-positioned to the iodine in Ar 2, the
[Ar 1O] + sometimes exhibited
dominant behavior. Conclusions: Comprehensive ESI-MS/MS studies
and theoretical calculations provided strong support for the O-atom
transfer mechanistic pathway: [Ar 1-I
+-( o-NO 2-Ar
2)] initially underwent a Smiles rearrangement to
the intermediate [Ar 1-O-( o-NO-Ar
2I)] +, which subsequently
dissociated to [Ar 1O] + or [
o-NO-Ar 2I] +•. Herein, we
proposed an unexpected ” ortho-effect” in the gas-phase
fragmentation reaction of [Ar 1-I
+-( o-NO 2-Ar
2)], in which the crucial determinant factor for the
aryl migration was identified as the Smiles rearrangement reaction.