We present experimental activation parameters for the reactions of six carbenes (CCl(2), CClF, CF(2), ClCOMe, FCOMe, and (MeO)(2)C) with six alkenes (tetramethylethylene, cyclohexene, 1-hexene, methyl acrylate, acrylonitrile, and α-chloroacrylonitrile). Activation energies range from -1 kcal/mol for the addition of CCl(2) to tetramethylethylene to 11 kcal/mol for the addition of FCOMe to acrylonitrile. A generally satisfactory analysis of major trends in the evolution of carbenic structure and reactivity is afforded by qualitative applications of frontier molecular orbital theory, although the observed entropies of activation appear to fall in a counterintuitive pattern. An analysis of computed cyclopropanation transition state parameters reveals significant nucleophilic selectivity of (MeO)(2)C toward α-chloroacrylonitrile.
p-X-substituted phenylchlorocarbenes (X = NO(2), CF(3), Cl, H, Me, and MeO) form π-type complexes with trimethoxybenzene in pentane. The carbenes and complexes are in equilibrium, and logarithms of the measured equilibrium constants are well correlated by Hammett σ(p) constants with ρ = 2.48. The carbene complexes are characterized by UV-vis spectroscopy, and computational analysis is afforded by DFT calculations.
Two experiments were performed to examine the role of method of estimation and the employment of a standard stimulus on the judged duration of auditory and visual stimuli presented for brief temporal intervals (0.25 to 5.0 s). The results indicate that the relationship between judged and physical duration is nearly direct and linear. Psychophysical methodology and stimulus modality exerted little influence on the obtained power functions.
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