It’s a question of the radical’s life time. To detail, hydroperoxide formation occurs via initiation, propagation and termination step, as being a radical reaction. β-Ether radical has a short life time and favors propagation. Contrary, α-ether radical has a longer life time due to the conjugation with the oxygen and therefore, it favors immediate termination of the radical reaction.
¨O=O¨ + hv (light) → ∙O∙=∙O∙ Initiation
C-H + ∙O∙=∙O∙ → C∙ + ∙O-OH Propagation
C∙ + H-C → C-H + C∙ Propagation
C∙ + ∙OOH → C-OOH Termination
Example: di-(n-propyl) ether that both α- and β- radicals are secondary.
CH3CH∙CH2¨OCH2CH2CH3 (propagation) → CH3CH2C∙H¨OCH2CH2CH3 ← → CH3CH2CH=O(+∙)CH2CH2CH3 (termination) → CH3CH2CH(OOH)OCH2CH2CH3
However, it must be noted that tertiary radicals have a longer life time compared with secondary and primary ones and that secondary radicals have a longer life time compared with primary ones.
The same question, as above: How does the degree of substitution affect radical stability?