Nitroxyl is a
weak acid, with
pKa of about 11, the conjugate base being the triplet state of NO−, sometimes called
nitroxide. Nitroxyl itself, however, is a singlet ground state. Thus, deprotonation of nitroxyl uniquely involves the forbidden spin crossing from the singlet state starting material to triplet state product: :
1HNO + B− →
3NO− + BH Due to the
spin-forbidden nature of deprotonation, proton abstraction is many orders of magnitude slower (
k = for deprotonation by OH−) than what one would expect for a heteroatom proton-transfer process (processes that are so fast that they are sometimes
diffusion-controlled). The
Ka of starting from or ending with the electronic excited states has also been determined. When process of deprotonating singlet state HNO to obtain singlet state NO− has a p
Ka is about 23. On the other hand, when deprotonating triplet HNO to obtain triplet NO−, the p
Ka is about −1.8. Nitroxyl rapidly decomposes by a bimolecular pathway to
nitrous oxide (
k at 298 K = ): :2 HNO → N2O + H2O The reaction proceeds via dimerization to
hyponitrous acid, H2N2O2, which subsequently undergoes dehydration. Therefore, HNO is generally prepared
in situ as described above. Nitroxyl is very reactive towards nucleophiles, including
thiols. The initial adduct rearranges to a
sulfinamide: :HNO + RSH → RS(O)NH2 ==Detection==