Kinetics of silver(I)-catalysed oxidation of hydrazinium ion by the [ethylenebis(biguanide)]silver(III) cation
Abstract
Silver(I) strongly catalyses the quantitative oxidation of hydrazine to dinitrogen by the complex [ethylenebis(biguanide)]silver(III), [Ag(H2L)]3+. In the range pH 2–3 the reaction follows the rate law (i)–d[complex]/dt=k0= 2K1k1[Ag+]2[N2H5+]/[H+](i), where k0 is the observed zero-order rate constant for large excess of Ag+, H+, and N2H5+ over the complex. Values of 1 O4K1k1 were 2.22 ± 0.16, 4.1 ± 0.25, 7.17 ± 0.5, and 12.5 ± 0.8 dm3 mol–1 s–1 at 15,20, 25, and 30°C. Corresponding ΔH‡ and ΔS‡ values are 82 ± 8 kJ mol–1 and –8 ± 2J K–1 mol–1 respectively. Under experimental conditions where AgII is detectable in concentrations less than about 10–6 mol dm–3, the whole reaction course is e.p.r. silent. No evidence for the formation of any radical intermediate is available. Apparently, a AgI–Ag0 catalytic cycle is involved wherein Ag+ slowly oxidises hydrazine of [Ag(N2H4)]+, with use of the complex as an oxidant which rapidly regenerates Ag+ from Ag02 formed as an intermediate.