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Conjugated Dienes: Classification & Structure

This document discusses conjugated dienes, which contain two carbon-carbon double bonds separated by a single bond. Conjugated dienes are more stable than isolated dienes due to resonance stabilization from delocalization of pi electrons across the carbon atoms. Electrophilic addition to conjugated dienes can occur at the 1,2 or 1,4 positions, forming regioisomeric products. At low temperatures, 1,2-addition is favored kinetically due to formation of a stable allylic carbocation intermediate. However, at higher temperatures the thermodynamically more stable 1,4-addition product predominates as equilibrium is reached.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
335 views13 pages

Conjugated Dienes: Classification & Structure

This document discusses conjugated dienes, which contain two carbon-carbon double bonds separated by a single bond. Conjugated dienes are more stable than isolated dienes due to resonance stabilization from delocalization of pi electrons across the carbon atoms. Electrophilic addition to conjugated dienes can occur at the 1,2 or 1,4 positions, forming regioisomeric products. At low temperatures, 1,2-addition is favored kinetically due to formation of a stable allylic carbocation intermediate. However, at higher temperatures the thermodynamically more stable 1,4-addition product predominates as equilibrium is reached.
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CH 15 CONJUGATED DIENES

- the class of compounds & the related molecular systems which will be discussed in this chapter
have in common the following structural feature:

- a set of adjacent sp2-hybridized carbon atoms whose interacting p atomic orbitals create a
delocalized pi (π) electron system

- these delocalized π electron systems lend themselves to the unique stability & reactivity exhibited
by the molecules which possess them

CLASSIFICATION & STRUCTURE –


- conjugated dienes contain two carbon-carbon double bonds separated by one carbon-carbon
single bond:
FG = C C C C
conjugated diene

- other types of dienes are possible, of course:

C C (C)n C C n>1 C C C

isolated diene cummulated diene

- other conjugated alkene systems (trienes, tetraenes,....polyenes) characterize numerous


molecules of significant biological and theoretical interest

EX ‘s

Benzene β-Carotene
( a cyclic conjugated triene) (a conjugated polyene)

Nomenclature –

- conjugated dienes are named using IUPAC rules for alkenes; the general form is:

alka-diene
Cl Cl
EX ‘s 5
1 4

2 3
(E
E)-hexa-1,3-diene 5,5-dichlorocyclopenta-1,3-diene
PREPARATION OF CONJUGATED DIENES –
- conjugated dienes are best prepared by dehydrohalogenation of allylic halides (whose preparation
is discussed later)

B
C C C C C C C C + HX
X H
allyl halide conjugated diene

X = Cl, Br, I, .... B = OH , OR , NH2 ,...... (in E2 solvent)

- the elimination reaction is regiospecific; the orientation of the second double bond is dictated by
conjugation to the first double bond

EX. Br

OH

DMF

STABILITY OF CONJUGATED DIENES –


- recall that the relative stability of an alkene can be determined by measuring enthalpy or heat of
hydrogenation (∆HH o) of the double bond
2

H2 ∆HH2o = -
C C C C kcal/mol
M
H H
alkene alkane

- by comparing heat of hydrogenation values for alkenes & dienes which produce the same alkane
upon reduction, the following correlation can be assumed:

as ∆HH2o9 C=C Stability 8

- in this manner, the relative stabilities of dienes can be determined:


Compound Structural Formula Heat of Hydrogenation, ∆HH2o

alkene C C ~30 kcal/mol

isolated diene C C (C)n C C ~60 kcal/mol

conjugated diene C C C C ~54 kcal/mol

cummulated diene C C C ~70 kcal/mol

- it can be seen that a conjugated diene is more stable than an isolated diene by approximately 6
kcal/mol (a cummulated diene is much less stable than either diene)

Rationale –

- each carbon in the conjugated diene uses sp2 hybrid orbitals (sp2 HO’s) to construct its sigma
bond framework

- each carbon, therefore, has a p atomic orbital (p AO) remaining which can house one of the four
pi (π) electrons (from the two double bonds)

- the four p AO’s can align parallel & overlap so that there is double bond character between all four
carbons (including the second & third carbons)

- this creates resonance stabilization through delocalization of the four π electrons through the four
parallel p AO’s

EX.

Resonance stabilization through delocalization in butadiene


ELECTROPHILIC ADDITION TO CONJUGATED DIENES –
- reaction of a conjugated diene with one equivalent of an electrophilic reagent results in the
formation of two regioisomeric addition products:

1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
C C C C + E Nu C C C C + C C C C
conjugated diene electrophilic E Nu E Nu
reagent 1,2-adduct 1,4-adduct

E Nu = HX, X2, H2O, .....

EX.
Cl Cl
Cl2
+

Cl Cl

1,2-adduct 1,4-adduct

- the reaction outcomes (1,2-addition & 1,4-addition) are rationalized by the existence of a certain
critical intermediates:

Allylic Carbocations –

- these resonance-stabilized intermediates are another example of delocalized π electron systems:

C C C C C C C C C

Resonance Contributors, RC's Resonance Hybrid, RH

- allylic carbocations are crucial intermediates in many other organic chemical transformations

- allylic carbocations are more stable than their corresponding alkyl counterparts:

Carbocation Stability Ranking:

3o allylic > 3o . 2o allylic > 2o . 1o allylic > 1o

R R R R H H
C C C > R C ~ C C C > R C ~ C C C > R C
R R H H H H
o
3o allylic R 3o R 2o allylic R 2o R 1o allylic R 1 R
Mechanism –

Kinetic vs Thermodynamic Control in Electrophilic Addition to Conjugated Dienes –

- the virtual “preference” for 1,2-addition versus 1,4-addition varies with temperature :

1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
C C C C + E Nu C C C C + C C C C
E Nu E Nu

1,2-adduct 1,4-adduct

Low T major minor

High T minor major

- furthermore, heating the 1,2-adduct converts it to the 1,4-adduct:

1 2 3 4

1 2 3 4
C C C C C C C C
E Nu E Nu

1,2-adduct 1,4-adduct

EX. Cl Cl
HCl
+

H H

1,2-adduct 1,4-adduct

T = - 80 oC 80 % 20%

T = +40 oC 15 % 85%
- this temperature-dependent product predominance can be explained by a general phenomenon
which applies to many reactions:

Kinetic Control –

- conditions characterized by low temperatures

- equilibrium has not yet been achieved & reaction processes are primarily irreversible

- the faster formed (kinetic) product is favored & will predominate

- the faster formed product ensues from the more stable intermediate

EX. the more stable allylic carbocation (RC I) leads to the major product ± the 1,2-adduct

More stable intermediate ......leads to major product

1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
C C C C > C C C C C C C C C C C C
E E E E Nu
RC I RC II 1,2-adduct
RC I
(more stable R ) (major)

Thermodynamic Control –

- conditions characterized by high temperatures

- equilibrium has been achieved & reaction processes are primarily reversible

- the more stable (thermodynamic) product is favored & will predominate

- the more stable alkene product is the one with the more substituted double bond

EX. the more stable (more substituted) alkene is the major product ± the 1,4-adduct

More stable alkene has the more substituted C C & forms the major product

1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
C C C C > C C C C
E Nu E Nu

1,4-adduct 1,2-adduct
Major
(more substituted; more stable)
Reaction-Energy Profile - Kinetic vs Thermodynamic Control in Addition of HBr to 1,3-butadiene

ALLYLIC FREE RADICAL HALOGENATION –

- like allylic carbocations, other allylic reactive intermediates (i.e. radicals & carbanions) are
resonance stabilized by π electron delocalization

- this creates a reactive site at the allylic carbon in alkenes, where for example, free radical
substitution can take place:

allylic C - a reactive site


C C C H

allylic H - can be removed/substituted

- thus, at low concentrations, halogens will substitute at the carbon next to the double bond of an
alkene rather than add to the double bond itself:

@ low [X2], substitute here

X2 C C C H X2
hi conc lo conc

C C C H C C C X
@ high [X2], add here
X X
addition substitution
- allylic halogenation is analogous to the free radical alkane halogenation discussed previously


C C C H + X2(g) C C C X + HX
or hν
alkene allylic halide

X = Cl, Br (usually gas phase; low concentration)

- as with electrophilic addition to conjugated dienes, reaction outcomes in allylic halogenation are
dictated by key intermediates:

Allylic Free Radicals –

- these resonance-stabilized intermediates account for the specific orientation of the substitution
(at the allylic carbon) as well as for the formation of multiple allyl halide products

C C C C C C C C C

Resonance Contributors, RC's Resonance Hybrid, RH

- the product predominance is (as before) temperature-dependent and is consistent with the
dictates of kinetic control (more stable intermediate favored at low T) or thermodynamic control
(more stable product favored at high T)

Mechanism –
EX. Cl

+ Cl2(g) hν
+ + HCl
low conc 0 oC
Cl

Major

N-Bromosuccinimide, NBS –

- a reagent which provides the required low concentration of bromine for allylic halogenation
without the inconvenience and difficulties associated with a gas phase reaction


C C C H + NBS C C C Br + HBr
or hν
alkene allylic bromide
O

NBS = N-bromosuccinimide, N Br

- NBS reacts with hydrogen bromide (initially from impurities & then from the reaction itself) to
generate a low, constant concentration of bromine
O O

N Br + H Br N H + Br Br

low, constant
O O concentration
NBS succinimide

- the bromine molecule is then cleaved (by heat or light) to bromine atoms & the mechanism
proceeds as described above for gas-phase generated halogens

EX.
Br
NBS
CH2 CH CH2CH3 CH2 CH CH CH3 + Br CH2 CH CH CH3 + H Br
o
77 C
Major
THE DIELS-ALDER REACTION–
- a 1,4-addition to a conjugated diene of the two carbons of an alkene’s double bond:

C C
C C ∆ C C
+
C C C C
C C

diene dienophile cycloadduct

- the Diels-Alder reaction is a member of two larger classes of reactions:

Pericyclic Reactions % concerted processes characterized by transition states composed of


closed loops of interacting p atomic orbitals

Cycloaddition Reactions % pericyclic reactions which form a ring, the size of which depends on
the number of carbons (& π electrons) in the reactants

- hence, the Diels-Alder reaction is a [4+2] cycloaddition reaction (many others exist)

- the Diels-Alder reaction is the most popular & useful cycloaddition reaction, capable of producing
a myriad range of substituted cyclic compounds in excellent yield with minimal effort

Mechanism –

- a concerted process in which two π bonds are transformed to two σ bonds & one π bond is
relocated, producing a six-membered ring
new σ
new π
C C C
C C C C C C
C C C C C C
C C C
new σ
diene dienophile transition state cycloadduct
4πe 2πe loop of parallel p AO 's 6-membered ring

Stereochemistry –

- because it is a concerted process, [4+2] cycloaddition is a stereospecific reaction

- the stereochemical configuration of both the diene & the dienophile will be conserved in the
product

- thus, if the diene or dienophile has a cis configuration, then the cycloadduct will be cis

- conversely, if the diene or dienophile has a trans configuration, then the cycloadduct will be trans
Conformation –

- the required conformation for the reacting diene is the less stable “cisoid” conformer:

C C
C C
does not react reacts
C C
C C

"transoid" "cisoid"
more stable less stable

- cis,cis -dienes with large, bulky groups on the 1 & 4 positions cannot adopt the cisoid
conformation (steric hindrance) & are rendered unreactive

Electron Demand –

- for best results, the diene should be electron “rich” (substituted with electron donating groups)
& the dienophile should be electron “poor” (substituted with electron withdrawing groups)

- because alkyne carbons are already electron deficient, acetylenic dienophiles are very effective

- it has been found that electron “poor” dienes react with electron “rich” dienophiles and such
“reverse electron demand” Diels-Alder reactions give good yields as well

EX. electron demand


CN CN
+ ∆

e rich e poor

EX. acetylenic dienophile


CO2CH3
CO2CH3

+
CO2CH3
CO2CH3

EX ‘s stereospecific towards dienophile

CN CN CN CN
∆ & ∆
+ +
CN CN NC CN
cis cis trans trans
EX ‘s stereospecific towards diene

O O O O
∆ ∆
+ O O & + O O

O O O O
trans, trans cis trans, cis
or trans
or
out, out out, in

Endo Rule –

- cyclic dienes produce bicyclic cycloadducts upon Diels-Alder cycloaddition

- the bicycle has an exo (top) face & an endo (bottom) face relative to the bridgehead

- the dienophile ‘s substituent(s) prefer endo positions (transition state stabilization)

- the endo product predominates in a bicyclic cycloadduct

An
∆ or An Endo
An +
Exo

cyclic diene dienophile Endo (predominates)

A = C, N, O, .... bicyclic cycloadduct


n = 1 or 2

EX ‘s endo product

CN CN

+ or
CN CN CN
CN
cis
cis & e ndo


+ or
CO2CH3
CO2CH3
CO2CH3
endo
EX ‘s use in synthesis


+
CHO
CHO

COOH COOH
Synthesize:
FROM & Dienes

COOH COOH

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