Abstract:
Three methods used in the kinetics of liquid-phase radical reactions for estimating the dissociation energies of individual bonds in polyatomic molecules are described. The first approach is based on the study of the equilibrium in radical abstraction reactions involving stable radicals and measurements of the equilibrium constants. The second method is based on the study of the kinetics of homolytic decomposition of molecules. Measuring the activation energy of these reactions makes it possible to estimate the dissociation energies of the weakest bonds, e.g., the O–O bonds in various peroxides. The essence of the third approach developed in the framework of the model of intersecting parabolas is calculations of the bond dissociation energy from the activation energy of a radical reaction involving the molecules under consideration. This method allowed the dissociation energies of the C–H, N–H, O–H and S–H bonds in a large number of organic compounds to be estimated. The scope and the specific features of application of each method are discussed and the bond dissociation energies determined by these methods are given.