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One demonstrated fusion process is the so-called hydrogen bomb or thermonuclear bomb in which a fission atom bomb is used to initiate a fusion reaction. The atomic bomb is surrounded by a layer of lithium deuteride. Neutrons from the atomic explosion (fission) cause the lithium to be converted into helium, tritium, and energy, [link] . The atomic explosion also supplies the 50,000,000 °C temperature needed for the subsequent fusion of deuterium with tritium, [link] . So in-fact the hydrogen bomb is misnamed and it should be called a deuterium bomb.
In the chemical laboratory deuterium compounds are commonly used in spectroscopy for:
A description of these applications is given below.
Given the larger mass of deuterium over hydrogen there is an associated difference in the rate of reactions (see below) and therefore investigations using hydrogen and deuterium analogs can provide information as to reaction mechanisms.
The spectroscopic differences between hydrogen and deuterium can also be used as a tracer to uniquely determine the source of particular substituents. For example, the magnesium (or Grignard) reduction of a ketone yields upon hydrolysis the secondary alcohol. If the reaction is carried out in a deuterated solvent and H 2 O used for hydrolysis then the secondary carbon is deuterated, [link] . In contrast, if the reaction is carried out in a non-deuterated solvent and hydrolysis is accomplished with D 2 O then the deuterated alcohol is formed, [link] . These experiments define that the initial reduction occurs at the ketone’s α-carbon.
Given the following reactions and the isotope distribution of the products suggest the reaction mechanism.
The nuclear magnetic moment of an atomic nucleus arises from the spins of the protons and neutrons within the nucleus. As a consequence the magnetic moment for hydrogen and deuterium are very different and hence the conditions for detection by NMR are very different. Thus, in observing the 1 H NMR spectrum of a compound not only are the deuterium atoms not observed, but the coupling is now H-D rather than H-H ( [link] ).
Deuterium is better at scattering neutrons than hydrogen. The H and D cross sections are very distinct and different in sign, which allows contrast variation in such experiments. Hydrogen’s low electron density makes it difficult to determine its position by X-ray diffraction methods, neutron diffraction methods allow for highly accurate structure determination. Hydrogen can be seen by neutron diffraction and scattering, however, it has a large incoherent neutron cross-section. This is nil for deuterium and thus delivers much clearer signals may be obtained for deuterated samples. Neutron scattering of deuterated samples is indispensable for many studies of macromolecules in biology.
The difference in mass between hydrogen and deuterium obviously results in a difference in molecular mass of their analogous compounds. This difference can be used for analysis by mass spectrometry, but it also results in different densities of compounds. For example, the density of H 2 O at 25 °C is 0.997 g/cm 3 , while the density of D 2 O at 25 °C is 1.104 g/cm 3 .
The vibrational frequency for a diatomic molecule, H-X, can be defined by the equation:
where f H-X is the H-X bond force constant, and µ H-X is the reduced mass.
If substitute H for D the D-X force constant is the same as the H-X force constant, but the reduced mass is twice the value for the H-X bond. As a result the ratio of the vibrational frequency of an H-X bond to that of the analogous D-X bond is given by the following equation.
With the change in vibrational energy there is concomitant change in the bond strength.
Thus, the rate of reactions will be faster for hydrogen derivative than the deuterium analog. The ratio of the rate constants will be dependant on the involvement of H-X bond breaking or forming in the rate limiting step (the slowest reaction step within the overall reaction mechanism). When an H-X bond is made or broken in the rate limiting step, then the ratio of the rate constants upon deuterium substitution will be:
This is known as the primary isotope effect . In this case where H-X bond breaking or forming is not part of the rate limiting step, then the isotope effect will be much smaller and is known as a secondary isotope effect .
The position of equilibrium reactions that involve hydrogen exchange, [link] , will be effected by the presence of deuterium to favor the deuterium being concentrated in the more stable bond. This is the basis of the concentration of HOD from HSD and water, [link] .
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