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Conjugated Dienes Theory of Linear and Cyclic Conjugation

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1 Conjugated Dienes Theory of Linear and Cyclic Conjugation
Chemistry 125: Lecture 55 February 23, 2011 Conjugated Dienes Theory of Linear and Cyclic Conjugation (4n+2) Aromaticity This For copyright notice see final page of this file

2 When does conjugation make a difference? Experimental Evidence
Allylic Cation, Anion, Radical stabilized by ~13 kcal/mole. Allylic SN1/SN2 Transition States also stabilized.

3 Conjugation worth only ~ 4 kcal/mole
Diene Stabilization DHhydrogenation (kcal/mole) -30.2 -29.8 -30.0 -60.0 hexadiene 1,4 cis ,4 trans , , cHexdiene 1, , diff 0.4±0.2 1,4 pentadiene 60.22 -60.4 Conjugation worth only ~ 4 kcal/mole -56.5

4 ps orthogonal at 90° twist anti syn Torsional Angle (°) 90 180 135 45
90 180 135 45 2 4 6 Energy kcal/mole Central “single-bond” twist gives a 6 kcal barrier (vs. ~ 60 kcal for C=C twist) based on Raman spectroscopy - Engeln, Consalvo, Reuss, Chemical Physics, 160, 427 (1992) ps orthogonal at 90°

5 Why is conjugation worth more in allylic intermediates than in dienes?
Because we can draw reasonable resonance structures? good bad

6 Conjugation & Aromaticity
Theory Simple Hückel MOs e.g. J&F Ch

7 Two Ways to Think about Butadiene  System
        4 p-orbitals Secondary mixing is minor (because of poor E-match)   : Averagesame as localized To maximize bonding-orbital overlap the central AOs are large in 1 and small in 2. (~3 kcal/mole max) 4 Delocalized  s or Localized /p* picture Very Little Difference! How different in overall stability?

8 Two Ways to Think about Butadiene  System
4 p-orbitals           : 4 Delocalized   Why ignore this mixing? Despite better E-match, it does not lower energy. Orthogonal (What is gained at two positions is lost at the others)

9 Two Ways to Think about Butadiene  System
How different in overall stability? Very Little! (~3 kcal/mole max) Localized  bond picture 4 Delocalized   : Although total energies are nearly the same with and without conjugation, there are substantial differences in HOMO & LUMO energies (Reactivity) far UV (167 nm) nearer UV (210 nm) and in HOMO-LUMO gap (Color). :

10 Is There a Limit to 1 Energy for Long Chains?
Overlap per  bond (AO product) 1/2 Number of  bonds 1 Total overlap stabilization 1/2 Chain length 2 Normalized AO size 1/2 4 1/4 1/4 3 3/4 8 1/8 1/8 7 7/8 N.B. We are ignoring the smallish influence of overlap on normalization. Also we are using our own “overlap stabilization” units, which are twice as large as the conventional “” units you will see in texts. N 1/N 1/N N-1 (N-1)/N Yes, the limit is 1, i.e. twice the stabilization of the H2C=CH2  bond. Similarly, the UMO destabilization limit is twice that of the H2C=CH2  MO.

11 Semicircle Mnemonic for  MO Energy in Conjugated Chains.
+1 -1 Radius of circle = 2  stabilization of H2C=CH2 [ limit of ±(N-1)/N ] Place points denoting length of chain evenly along circumference between upper and lower limit (+1 and -1). MO Energy (units of 2) etc. All odd chains have a non-bonding MO with nodes on alternant carbons. It is the locus of the “odd” electron in the radical, and of + (-) charge in the cation (anion). p N=2 ethylene N=3 allyl N=1 an isolated 2p AO N=4 1,3-butadiene As the conjugated chain lengthens, more and more levels are crowded between -1 and +1, and the HOMO-LUMO gap decreases. (difference is resonance stabilization of butadiene vs. 2 isolated ethylenes) allylic stabilization (vs. isolated p and ) same 2-electron stabilization for cation, radical, anion Color shift toward red.

12 AROMATICITY Cyclic Conjugation worth ~30 kcal ! ~78 predicted ~22-24
54 26 observed 49 Conjugation worth ~2 kcal 28 Heats of Hydrogenation (kcal/mole) Cf. J&F 13.5a pp

13 Bringing the ends of a conjugated chain together to form a ring gives a lowest  MO with an additional bond. (much more effective than adjusting AO sizes) Lowest MO will have energy = -N/N = -1 In a conjugated ring peripheral nodes must come in even numbers. e.g. cyclopropenyl E = -1 E = +1/2 E = +1/2 0 nodes 2 nodes 2 nodes

14 Energy Shifts on “Ring Formation”
Shifts Alternate (because of node parity). +1 -1 MO Energy (units of 2) unfavorable favorable unfavorable End to End Interaction favorable

15 On bringing the ends of a chain together,
odd-numbered  MOs (1, 3, 5, etc.) decrease in energy (favorable terminal overlap for 0,2,4… nodes), while even-numbered  MOs (2, 4, 6, etc.) increase in energy (unfavorable terminal overlap for 1,3,5… nodes). Thus having an odd number of occupied  MOs (more odd-numbered than even-numbered) insures overall  stabilization of ring (compared to chain). [though there may be strain in the  bonds] Hückel’s Rule: 4n+2  electrons is unusually favorable in a conjugated ring. an odd number of e-pairs (where n in an integer)

16 Circle Mnemonic for  MO Energy in Conjugated Rings.
+1 -1 MO Energy (units of 2) open-chain  energies from semicircle mnemonic Same radius as for open chain Stabilized (vs. hexatriene) : : 4n “Antiaromatic”! slightly destabilized (vs. butadiene) Inscribe regular polygon with point down. Cation strongly stabilized (vs. allyl+) : Radical less stabilized (vs. allyl•) . Read MO energies on vertical scale. : . . Anion de stabilized - reactive SOMOs ! 3 cyclopropenyl 4 cyclobutadiene 6 benzene : : There is always an MO at -1.

17 Generalization of Aromaticity: 4n+2 Stability Transition State “Aromaticity” Cycloadditions & Electrocyclic Reactions e.g. J&F Sec pp

18 Heteroaromatic Compounds
Pyridine H O Furan Y- H X H X- Y H N Pyrrole H H N Imidazole (occurs in amino acid histidine) Relay for long-range proton transfer by enzymes N.B. Single denotes contribution of 1 e to  system (redundant with double bond). e.g. J&F Sec pp

19 Furan 4 ABNs 2 ABNs 0 anti-bonding nodes

20 SHMo2 (Simple Hückel Molecular Orbital Program)
(N.B. must click “Show Orbitals” to update energies after changing structure) SHMo2 (Simple Hückel Molecular Orbital Program) Crude  calculation shows heterocycle analogy. N N identical shape energy lower energy node on N high N density N Benzene Pyridine larger on N lower energy

21 Cyclodecapentaene  Naphthalene (SHMo2)
same as ethylene same as cyclodecapentaene & butadiene same as butadiene

22 Another Criterion of Aromaticity is the PMR Chemical Shift (coming soon, Chapter 15)

23 Generalized Aromaticity
H H OH- We’ll cover this frame on Friday. I’ve left it in because it is fair game for Monday’s exam. pKa 15 vs. 16 for H2O 6  electrons (4n+2) cyclo-C7H cyclo-C7H7- pKa 39 (despite more resonance structures) 8  electrons (4n, antiaromatic) e.g. J&F Sec p. 591 R H + Ph3C+ + Ph3CH R + even more stable unusually stable cation (triply benzylic) 2  electrons (4n+2) Same for cyclo-C7H cyclo-C7H7+ (cycloheptatrienyl “tropylium”) e.g. J&F Sec. 13.6pp. 587, 592 6  electrons (4n+2)

24 End of Lecture 55 February 23, 2011
Copyright © J. M. McBride Some rights reserved. Except for cited third-party materials, and those used by visiting speakers, all content is licensed under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0). Use of this content constitutes your acceptance of the noted license and the terms and conditions of use. Materials from Wikimedia Commons are denoted by the symbol Third party materials may be subject to additional intellectual property notices, information, or restrictions. The following attribution may be used when reusing material that is not identified as third-party content: J. M. McBride, Chem 125. License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 3.0


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