Correlation analysis of carbonyl carbon 13C NMR chemical shifts, IR absorption frequencies and rate coefficients of nucleophilic acyl substitutions. A novel explanation for the substituent dependence of reactivity
Abstract
Rate coefficients of nucleophilic acyl substitutions, carboxylate carbon 13C NMR chemical shift values and ν(CO) frequencies of several series of aryl and acyl substituted aryl acetates or alkyl benzoates have been investigated. An increasing electron-withdrawal by the acyl or aryl substituents results in higher reaction rates, upfield 13C NMR chemical shifts and higher frequencies of the C
O stretching. Good correlations are observed for the log kversus δC(C
O) plots. The increase of the reaction rate with increased electron density at the C
O carbon (as proved by 13C NMR shifts) contradicts the previous concept of increased electrophilicity of the carbonyl carbon by electron-withdrawing substituents. The rate increase is now attributed to the decrease of the ester ground state resonance stabilization caused by electron-withdrawing substituents. The use of log kversus δC(C
O) correlations is presented as a practical method to evaluate rate coefficients especially for compounds for which Hammett type correlations cannot be used.