The formation of dimer radical cations from aromatic sulfides has been studied by photochemical one-electron oxidation in acetonitrile. When dicyanonaphthalene and thioanisole in acetonitrile were irradiated with nanosecond laser flash (308 nm), two types of dimer radical cations were detected at 470 and 800 nm at the expense of the monomer radical cation (520 nm). The intramolecular formation of similar radical ion complexes was observed for the cases of 1,n-bis(phenylthio)alkanes with n ) 3 and 4, while bissulfides with n ) 2, 6, and 8 showed radical cation spectra quite different from the above cases of n ) 3 and 4. These facts indicate that dimer radical cations absorbing at around 460-500 nm are assigned as the σ-type complex of the sulfur-sulfur three-electron bond and that radical cations absorbing at around 800 nm are of the π-type complex associated with two phenylthio groups. For the case of p-methylthioanisole the formation of π-type dimer was shown to be reduced owing to the steric hindrance of two methyl groups. No formation of dimer radical cations was observed for cases of p-methoxythioanisole and diphenyl sulfide where the corresponding monomer radical cations are stabilized by the delocalization of positive charge on the sulfur atom. The density functional BLYP/6-31G* calculations on thioanisole predicted the existence of σand π-type dimer radical cations, in accordance with the experimental observation of approximately equal stability.
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