Revisiting Textbook Azide-Clock Reactions: A "Propeller-Crawling" Mechanism Explains Differences in Rates

J Am Chem Soc. 2024 May 8;146(18):12828-12835. doi: 10.1021/jacs.4c03360. Epub 2024 Apr 30.

Abstract

An ongoing challenge to chemists is the analysis of pathways and kinetics for chemical reactions in solution, including transient structures between the reactants and products that are difficult to resolve using laboratory experiments. Here, we enabled direct molecular dynamics simulations of a textbook series of chemical reactions on the hundreds of ns to μs time scale using the weighted ensemble (WE) path sampling strategy with hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) models. We focused on azide-clock reactions involving addition of an azide anion to each of three long-lived trityl cations in an acetonitrile-water solvent mixture. Results reveal a two-step mechanism: (1) diffusional collision of reactants to form an ion-pair intermediate; (2) "activation" or rearrangement of the intermediate to the product. Our simulations yield not only reaction rates that are within error of experiment but also rates for individual steps, indicating the activation step as rate-limiting for all three cations. Further, the trend in reaction rates is due to dynamical effects, i.e., differing extents of the azide anion "crawling" along the cation's phenyl-ring "propellers" during the activation step. Our study demonstrates the power of analyzing pathways and kinetics to gain insights on reaction mechanisms, underscoring the value of including WE and other related path sampling strategies in the modern toolbox for chemists.