Abstract
Most previous work on the inhibition of autoxidation by phenols has indicated that the reaction involves abstraction of the phenolic hydrogen. However, the apparent absence of any appreciable deuterium isotope effect made it difficult to believe that abstraction could be rate controlling. The present work using styrene as the substrate, 2,6-di-tert-butyl-4-methyl-phenol as the inhibitor, and azo-bis-isobutyronitrile as the initiator has shown that this reaction has an unexpectedly large isotope effect, e.g. ~10.6 at 65 °C. Previous failures to detect an isotope effect are attributed to the rapid exchange of deuterium which takes place between deuterated phenols and traces of moisture or other hydroxyl-containing compounds present in the substrate. Rate constants and activation energies for some of the elementary reactions in the inhibited and uninhibited oxidation of styrene have been measured. It is suggested that a compound which functions in the same way as a weak phenolic inhibitor is formed in the apparently uninhibited oxidation.

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