Modeling of the aniline with nitrobenzene reaction was carried out by PM6 method with tetramethylammonium hydroxide. Calculated data prove that the stage of transfer of hydride ion from the p-[sigma]-complex to the acceptor, i.e. nitrobenzene or 4- nitrodiphenylamine determines the rate of aniline with nitrobenzene condensation. Herein, intermolecular transfer mechanism that has lower activation energy is the most likely one if compared with intramolecular mechanism. It is shown that tetramethylammonium cation can form ionic and ion-dipole complexes with the components of the reaction mixture and its field influences the distribution of electron density in the reactants and their reactivity
The polymerization process of dicyclopentadiene using a multicomponent catalytic system based on bis(cyclopentadienyl)titanium dichloride and diethylaluminum chloride was studied. It was demonstrated that the application of an excess of the aluminum component leads to the formation of stable charged complexes of blue discoloration, which initiate cationic polymerization of dicyclopentadiene. Unstabilized thin layers of obtained polydicyclopentadiene undergo oxidation and structuring under atmospheric oxygen. Oxidation of polydicyclopentadiene films in air occurs slowly during several weeks and can be determined by the increase of carbonyl and hydroxyl adsorption bands in infrared spectra. Along with oxidation, cross-linking processes occur in polymers, which lead to a change in physical parameters of the layers, and more precisely to a decrease in the permeability of atmospheric oxygen through the layers. Consequently, this leads to the transition of the oxidation from a kinetic mode into a diffusive mode. Such structural changes do not occur in a polymer that was stabilized by adding an antioxidant.
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