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Dive into the research topics where Gene G. Wubbels is active.

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Featured researches published by Gene G. Wubbels.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2008

The element effect and nucleophilicity in nucleophilic aromatic photosubstitution (SN2Ar*). Local atom effects as mechanistic probes of very fast reactions.

Gene G. Wubbels; Toby R. Brown; Travis A. Babcock; Kandra M. Johnson

Photoreactions of 4-nitroanisole and the 2-halo-4-nitroanisoles (halogen = F, Cl, Br, and I) with the nucleophiles hydroxide ion and pyridine have been investigated quantitatively to extend the findings recently communicated for cyanide ion. The halonitroanisoles on excitation form triplet pi,pi* states, which undergo substitution of the halogen by nucleophiles. Chemical yields of photoproducts, Stern-Volmer kinetic plots, triplet lifetimes, and triplet yields are reported for the five compounds with the three nucleophiles. Following a standard kinetic treatment, 73 rate constants are determined for elementary reactions of the triplets including quenching and various nucleophilic addition processes. The photoadditions are roughly 14 orders of magnitude faster than thermal counterparts. Rate constants for attack at the fluorine-bearing carbon of triplet 2-fluoro-4-nitroanisole are 2.9 x 10(9), 1.3 x 10(9), and 6.3 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1) for cyanide ion, hydroxide ion, and pyridine, respectively. The relative rates for attack at the halogen-bearing carbons for F/Cl/Br/I are 27:1.9:1.9:1 (cyanide ion), 29:2.6:2.4:1 (hydroxide ion), and 39:3.9:3.5:1 (pyridine), respectively. The relative nucleophilicities vary somewhat with the attack site; they are about 5:2:1 for cyanide ion, hydroxide ion, and pyridine for attack at the halogen-bearing carbons. The trend of the element effect opposes that of aliphatic substitution and elimination but is similar in size and parallel to that of thermal nucleophilic aromatic substitution. Relative nucleophilicities in the photoreactions are also similar to those of comparable but vastly slower thermal reactions. The findings imply that the efficiency-determining step of the halogen photosubstitution is simple formation of a sigma-complex through electron-paired bonding within the triplet manifold.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1986

Effect of α-cyclodextrin complexation on a general-base-catalyzed photo-Smiles rearrangement

Gene G. Wubbels; Bradley R. Sevetson; Steven N. Kaganove

Abstract (α-Cyclodextrin complexation suppresses the efficiency of base-catalyzed photo-Smiles rearrangement of p-O 2 NC 6 H 4 OCH 2 CH 2 NHPh by 80% in aqueous solution. α-CD does not restrict the electron transrer; it inhibits by enhancing the decay of an intermediate.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2013

Temperature-Dependent Regioselectivity of Nucleophilic Aromatic Photosubstitution. Evidence That Activation Energy Controls Reactivity

Gene G. Wubbels; Ryo Tamura; Emmett J. Gannon

Irradiation (λ > 330 nm) of 2-chloro-4-nitroanisole (1) at 25 °C in aqueous NaOH forms three substitution photoproducts: 2-methoxy-5-nitrophenol (2), 2-chloro-4-nitrophenol (3), and 3-chloro-4-methoxyphenol (4), in chemical yields of 69.2%, 14.3%, and 16.5%. The activation energies for the elementary steps from the triplet state at 25 °C were determined to be 1.8, 2.4, and 2.7 kcal/mol, respectively. The chemical yields of each of the three products were determined for exhaustive irradiations at 0, 35, and 70 °C. The variation with temperature of the experimental yields is reproduced almost exactly by the yields calculated with the Arrhenius equation. This indicates that activation energy is the fundamental property related to regioselectivity in nucleophilic aromatic photosubstitution of the S(N)2 Ar* type. The many methods proposed for predicting regioselectivity in reactions of this type have had limited success and have not been related to activation energy.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2010

Temperature Dependence of Regioselectivity in Nucleophilic Photosubstitution of 4-Nitroanisole. The Activation Energy Criterion for Regioselectivity

Gene G. Wubbels; Hanan Danial; Danielle Policarpio

Photosubstitution of the nitro group vs the methoxy group of triplet 4-nitroanisole by hydroxide ion in water leads to product yields of about 80% 4-methoxyphenol and 20% 4-nitrophenol. The ratio depends slightly on temperature from 3 to 73 °C. The slight temperature variation in the yield ratio is reproduced almost perfectly with a simple Arrhenius model for a mechanism involving bonding of hydroxide ion with the triplet state of 4-nitroanisole. The competing transition states have activation energies of 2.2 and 2.6 kcal/mol, respectively. Correct prediction of regioselectivity can be done for this case by quantum chemical calculation of the competing triplet transition-state energies, or those of the corresponding triplet σ-complexes. Other models for aromatic photosubstitution regioselectivity in mechanisms of the S(N)2Ar* type, such as those based on calculated electron densities, HOMO/LUMO coefficients, or energy gap sizes, are discussed and shown to be inferior to the relative activation energies model. The photoreaction in alcohol solvents, claimed by others to generate the same products as in water and to have an exceedingly large variation of the product ratio with temperature, may reflect chemical changes other than those reported.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1989

α-Cyclodextrin complexation as a probe of heterolytic general base-catalyzed photo-smiles rearrangements

Gene G. Wubbels; W.Donald Cotter

Abstract α-Cyclodextrin complexation of 3-O 2 NC 6 H 4 O(CH 2 ) n NH 2 inhibits by 40 and 15%, respectively, the efficiency of base-catalyzed and uncatalyzed photo-Smiles rearrangement for n = 2; α-CD complexation inhibits the photorearrangement efficiency of n = 3 by 40% in the base-catalyzed regime but enhances the efficiency by 67% in the uncatalyzed regime.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1981

Photosensitized dissociation of di-tert-butyl peroxide. Energy transfer to a repulsive excited state

J. C. Scaiano; Gene G. Wubbels


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1973

Hydrochloric acid catalyzed photoreduction of nitrobenzene by 2-propanol. Question of protonation in the excited state

Gene G. Wubbels; Jeffrey W. Jordan; Nancy S. Mills


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 1985

Regioselectivity of photochemical and thermal Smiles rearrangements and related reactions of .beta.-(nitrophenoxy)methylamines

Gene G. Wubbels; Ann M. Halverson; Joe D. Oxman; Van H. De Bruyn


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1974

Photoreactions of nitrobenzene and monosubstituted nitrobenzenes with hydrochloric acid. Evidence concerning the reaction mechanism

Gene G. Wubbels; Robert L. Letsinger


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1981

Base catalysis in a photochemical Smiles rearrangement. A case of general base catalysis of a photoreaction

Gene G. Wubbels; Daniel W. Celander

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Joe D. Oxman

Northwestern University

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Douglas M. Tollefsen

Washington University in St. Louis

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E. Bryan Coughlin

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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