Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.139, No.41, 14352-14355, 2017
Pomeranz-Fritsch Synthesis of Isoquinoline: Gas-Phase Collisional Activation Opens Additional Reaction Pathways
We have investigated the gas-phase production of isoquinoline by performing collisional activation on benzalaminoacetal, the first intermediate in the classic solution-phase Pomeranz-Fritsch synthesis of isoquinoline. We have elucidated the reaction pathways in the gas phase using tandem mass spectrometry. Unlike the corresponding condensed-phase reaction, where catalytic proton exchange between intermediate(s) and solvent (Bronsted-Lowry base) is known to drive the reaction, the gas-phase reaction follows the "mobile proton model" to form the products via a number of intermediates, some the same as in their condensed-phase counterparts. Energy-resolved mass spectrometry, deuterium labeling experiments, and theoretical calculations (B3LYP/631G**) identified 27 different reaction routes in the gas phase, forming a complex interlinked reaction network. The experimental measurements and theoretical calculations confirm the proton hopping onto different basic sites of the precursors and intermediates to transform them ultimately into isoquinoline.