The kinetics of the activation of hydrogen peroxide by p-nitrophenyl chloroformate (NPCF
) in tetrahydrofuran (THF
) have been investigated by measuring the phosphorescence of the released singlet molecular oxygen (1O2) at 1270 nm. The results are consistent with the assumption that the reaction between hydrogen peroxide and NPCF under pseudo first-order conditions with respect to hydrogen peroxide proceeds via a consecutive, pseudo first-order reaction. In the first pseudo first-order reaction O-p-nitrophenyl monoperoxycarbonic acid 1 and hydrochloric acid are formed. The corresponding second-order rate constant at T = 20 °C was found to be k5 = (2.6 ± 0.5) × 10−2 dm3 mol−1 s−1. In the second pseudo first-order reaction 1 undergoes an acid-catalysed decomposition to give, in the end, besides p-nitrophenol, carbon trioxide (CO3), the anhydride of the unstable monoperoxycarbonic acid. The pseudo first-order rate constant of this catalysis was determined to be k10 = (2.9 ± 0.4) × 10−3 s−1 at T = 20 °C. The Arrhenius parameters determined for both reactions are consistent with the assumption that the formation of 1 occurs according to a BAC2-mechanism and that the acid-catalysed decomposition of 1 occurs according to an AAC1-mechanism. The assumption that 1 in the NPCF–H2O2 system undergoes an acid-catalysed decomposition to give CO3 is confirmed by the results of the measurements carried out with the 1H-1,2,4-triazolecarboxylic acid p-nitrophenyl ester (TCNP)–H2O2 system in THF in the presence of sulfuric acid. Moreover, in the NPCF–H2O2–THF system 1O2 is generated by the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide catalysed by chloride. The fact that in acidic solution 1O2 is formed by a chloride-catalysed decomposition of hydrogen peroxide is confirmed by measurements carried out with hydrochloric acid–H2O2 systems in THF and in water, respectively. For the latter system it is found that the oxygen liberated is exclusively formed as 1O2.
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