posted on 2003-01-17, 00:00authored bySonia Ilieva, Boris Galabov, Djamaladdin G. Musaev, Keiji Morokuma, Henry F. Schaefer
The aminolysis of esters is a basic organic reaction considered as a model for the interaction of
carbonyl group with nucleophiles. In the present computational study the different possible
mechanistic pathways of the reaction are reinvestigated by applying higher level electronic structure
theory, examining the general base catalysis by the nucleophile, and a more comprehensive study
the solvent effect. Both the ab initio QCISD/6-31(d,p) method and density functional theory at the
B3LYP/6-31G(d) level were employed to calculate the reaction pathways for the simplest model
aminolysis reaction between methylformate and ammonia. Solvent effects were assessed by the
PCM method. The results show that in the case of noncatalyzed aminolysis the addition/elimination
stepwise mechanism involving two transition states and the concerted mechanism have very similar
activation energies. However, in the case of catalyzed aminolysis by a second ammonia molecule
the stepwise mechanism has a distinctly lower activation energy. All transition states in the
catalyzed aminolysis are 10−17 kcal/mol lower than those for the uncatalyzed process.