Conjugation in Alkadienes and Allylic Systems
Conjugation in Alkadienes and Allylic Systems
Conjugation in Alkadienes and Allylic Systems
C C
C+
C C
allylic carbocation
allylic radical
C C C
conjugated diene
H C H C H
H C H
vinylic carbons
C C
allylic carbon
H C H C H
Vinylic hydrogens are attached to vinylic carbons.
H H C C C C H
X C X C X
Vinylic substituents are attached to vinylic carbons.
X X C C C C X
Allylic Carbocations The fact that a tertiary allylic halide undergoes solvolysis (SN1) faster than a simple tertiary alkyl halide CH3 CH3 H2 C CH C CH3 123 Cl CH3 C CH3 1 Cl
C C
Allylic Carbocations Provides good evidence for the conclusion that allylic carbocations are more stable than other carbocations CH3 CH3 H2 C CH C+ CH3 CH3 C+ CH3
Delocalization of electrons in the double bond stabilizes the carbocation. resonance model orbital overlap model
Resonance Model
CH3
CH3
Hydrolysis of an Allylic Halide CH3 H2 C CH C CH3 H2 O CH3 H2 C CH C CH3 OH + HOCH2 CH C CH3 (85%) Na2CO3 CH3 H2 C CH Cl
Corollary Experiment CH3 ClCH2 ClCH CH C CH3 H2 O CH3 C CH3 OH + HOCH2 CH C CH3 Na2CO3 CH3
(85%)
(15%)
(15%)
CH3 H2 C CH C CH3 Give the same products because they form the same carbocation. CH3 H2 C CH C+ CH3 + H2 C CH C Cl ClCH and ClCH2 CH C
CH3
(85%) H2 C CH
CH3 C CH3
(15%) OH + HOCH2 CH C
CH3
CH3
CH3
More positive charge on tertiary carbon; therefore more tertiary alcohol in product. CH3 H2 C CH3 CH C+ CH3 CH3 + H2 C CH C CH3 CH3
Allylic SN2 Reactions Allylic halides also undergo SN2 reactions faster than simple primary alkyl halides. 10.4 SN2 Reactions of Allylic Halides H2 C CH 80 relative rates: (I-, acetone) CH2 Cl H3 C CH2 CH2 Cl 1
Allylic SN2 Reactions Two factors: Steric Trigonal carbon smaller than tetrahedral carbon. Two factors: Electronic
Electron delocalization lowers LUMO energy which means lower activation energy.
H2 C
CH 80
CH2 Cl
H3 C
CH2 CH2 Cl 1
H2 C
CH 80
CH2 Cl
H3 C
CH2 CH2 Cl 1
Allylic Free Radicals are Stabilized by Electron Delocalization 10.5 Allylic Free Radicals
C C C C C
C C
Allylic Free Radicals are Stabilized by Electron Delocalization Spin density is a measure of the unpaired electron distribution in a molecule. Figure 10.2 shows the unpaired electron in allyl radical "divides its time" equally between C-1 and C-3. C-
CH3CH2CH2H
410 kJ/mol
CH3CH2CH2 + H CHCH2 + H
H2 C
CHCH2H
368 kJ/mol
H2 C
CH bond is weaker in propene because resulting radical (allyl) is more stable than radical (propyl) from propane.
Allylic Halogenation
H C H
410 kJ/mol
H H C C H H
368 kJ/mol
H .. . Cl: .. H
410 kJ/mol
H C C H H .. H : Cl: ..
368 kJ/mol
allylic CH bond weaker than vinylic chlorine atom abstracts allylic H in propagation step
N-Bromosuccinimide Reagent used (instead of Br2) for allylic bromination. O NBr + O (82-87%) (82heat CCl4 O Br + O NH
Limited Scope Allylic halogenation is only used when: all of the allylic hydrogens are equivalent and the resonance forms of allylic radical are equivalent.
H H
CH3CH
CH
CH
CH2
Two resonance forms are not equivalent; gives mixture of isomeric allylic bromides.
C C
C-
Two resonance forms are not equivalent; gives mixture of isomeric allylic bromides.
Resonance Model
CH2 H2 C
H2 C CH2
CH
CH2
CH2 CH3
CH
Classification of Dienes
Nomenclature
Heats of Hydrogenation 1,3-pentadiene is 1,326 kJ/mol more stable than 1,4-pentadiene, 1,4but some of this stabilization is because it also contains a more highly substituted double bond.
Heats of Hydrogenation
111 kJ/mol
252 kJ/mol
115 kJ/mol
252 kJ/mol
226 kJ/mol
Heats of Hydrogenation
Heats of Hydrogenation
126 kJ/mol
111 kJ/mol
126 kJ/mol
111 kJ/mol
When terminal double bond is conjugated with other double bond, its heat of hydrogenation is 15 kJ/mol less than when isolated.
This extra 15 kJ/mol is known by several terms: conjugation energy delocalization energy resonance energy
Heats of Hydrogenation Cumulated double bonds have relatively high heats of hydrogenation. H2 C C CH2 + 2H2 CH3CH2CH3 10.10 Bonding in Conjugated Dienes
H = -295 kJ
H2 C
CH2CH3 + H2
CH3CH2CH3 H = -125 kJ
Isolated diene
Isolated diene
1,4-pentadiene 1,4-
1,3-pentadiene 1,3-
1,3-pentadiene 1,3-
Conjugated diene
Conjugated diene
Isolated diene
Isolated diene
p orbitals overlap to give extended bond encompassing four carbons. Conjugated diene Conjugated diene
Conformations of Dienes
s-trans
s-trans
s-cis
s prefix designates conformation around single bond. s prefix is lower case (different from Cahn-IngoldCahn- IngoldPrelog S which designates configuration and is upper case).
Both conformations allow electron delocalization via overlap of p orbitals to give extended system.
Interconversion of conformations requires two bonds to be at right angles to each other and prevents conjugation.
12 kJ/mol
16 kJ/mol
12 kJ/mol
Cumulated Dienes
Structure of Allene
Cumulated dienes are less stable than isolated and conjugated dienes. (see Problem 10.10) Linear arrangement of carbons Nonplanar geometry
Bonding in Allene
Bonding in Allene
sp 2
sp
sp 2
Bonding in Allene
Bonding in Allene
Chiral Allenes Allenes of the type shown are chiral A C B A B; X Y Have a chirality axis C C Y X
Chirality Axis
Analogous to difference between: A screw with a right-hand thread and one rightwith a left-hand thread. leftA right-handed helix and a left-handed helix. rightleft-
1,3-Butadiene 1,3590-675C 590- 675 CH3CH2CH2CH3 10.12 Preparation of Dienes chromiachromiaalumina H2 C CHCH + 2H2 CH2
More than 4 billion pounds of 1,3-butadiene 1,3prepared by this method in U.S. each year. Used to prepare synthetic rubber (See "Diene Polymers" box).
Dehydration of Alcohols
KHSO4 OH heat Br
KOH heat
Reactions of Dienes
Isolated dienes: double bonds react independently dienes: of one another. Cumulated dienes: specialized topic. Conjugated dienes: reactivity pattern requires us to think of conjugated diene system as a functional group of its own.
Example: Electrophilic Addition to Conjugated Dienes H + H Proton adds to end of diene system. Carbocation formed is allylic. H H H H H Cl H H
H H H HCl ? ? H H H H H H Cl H
Example:
via: H H
H H X
H +
H H H H H
H H H HCl H H Cl H H H H H
H H H
Protonation of the end of the diene unit gives an allylic carbocation. carbocation.
H + H
H H H H
and: H + H H H H H H Cl H H Cl H H H H H
1,2-addition of XY 1,2Y
1,4-addition of XY 1,4Y
H + H
H H H H
3-Chlorocyclopentene H H X via + X X Cl H H H H H
HBr Addition to 1,3-Butadiene 1,3H2 C CHCH HBr CH3CHCH Br Electrophilic addition 1,2 and 1,4-addition both observed 1,4Product ratio depends on temperature CH2 + CH3CH CHCH2Br CH2
Rationale 3-Bromo-1-butene (left) is formed faster than Bromo1-bromo-2-butene (right) because allylic carbocations bromoreact with nucleophiles preferentially at the carbon that bears the greater share of positive charge. CH3CHCH CH2 + CH3CH CHCH2Br
CH2
CH3CH
Rationale 1-Bromo-2-butene is more stable than Bromo3-bromo-1-butene because it has a bromomore highly substituted double bond. +
Rationale The two products equilibrate at 25C. 25 Once equilibrium is established, the more stable isomer predominates. CH3CHCH CH2 CH3CH CHCH2Br
CH3CHCH
CH2
CH3CH
CHCH2Br
Br (formed faster)
(more stable)
Kinetic Control versus Thermodynamic Control + CH3CHCH Kinetic control: major product is the one formed at the fastest rate. Thermodynamic control: major product is the one that is the most stable. CH2 CH3CH HBr H2 C CHCH CH2 + CHCH2
+ CH3CHCH
CH2
Example Problem Addition of hydrogen chloride to 2-methyl-1,3-butadiene is a kinetically controlled methyl- 1,3reaction and gives one product in much greater amounts than any isomers. What is this product?
CH3CH
+ CHCH2
CH3CHCH Br
CH2
HCl
Think mechanistically H Cl
HCl
Cl
Kinetically controlled product corresponds to attack by chloride ion at carbon that has the greatest share of positive charge in the carbocation.
+ +
One resonance form is secondary carbocation; other is primary.
Cl
Cl
+
Is attacked by chloride ion at carbon that bears greater share of positive charge.
Cl
Cl major product
Example H2 C 10.14 Halogen Addition to Dienes Gives mixtures of 1,2 and 1,4-addition products 1,4BrCH2CHCH BrCH Br (37%) (63%) CH2 + CHCH Br2 BrCH2CH BrCH CHCH2Br CH2
In General...
10.15 The Diels-Alder Reaction DielsSynthetic method for preparing compounds containing a cyclohexene ring
cyclohexene
via
Mechanistic Features Concerted mechanism Cycloaddition Pericyclic reaction transition state A concerted reaction that proceeds through a cyclic transition state.
What Makes a Reactive Dienophile? Dienophile? The most reactive dienophiles have an electron-withdrawing group (EWG) directly electron(EWG) attached to the double bond.
cyclohexene C C
EWG
Typical EWGs C O
The equation as written is somewhat misleading because ethylene is a relatively unreactive dienophile. dienophile.
O O
benzene via: O CH
100C O 100 O
H3 C O O
(100%)
(100%)
Acetylenic Dienophile O H2 C CHCH CH2 + CH3CH2OCC benzene 100C 100 O COCH2CH3 (98%) COCH2CH3 O O CCOCH2CH3 Diels-Alder Reaction is Stereospecific* Diels*A stereospecific reaction is one in which stereoisomeric starting materials give stereoisomeric products; characterized by terms like syn addition, anti elimination, inversion of configuration, etc. Diels-Alder: syn addition to alkene Dielscis-trans relationship of substituents on alkene cisretained in cyclohexene product
O COH
O COH
C6 H5 H COH H O
O H Cyclic Dienes Yield Bridged Bicyclic Diels-Alder Adducts Diels+ CH3OC O C C H H O COCH3 H COCH3 O COCH3
O COCH3 H H COCH3 O
COCH3 O
A deeper understanding of chemical reactivity can be gained by focusing on the frontier orbitals of the reactants. Electrons flow from the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) of one reactant to the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) of the other. We can illustrate HOMO-LUMO interactions by HOMOway of the Diels-Alder reaction between Dielsethylene and 1,3-butadiene. 1,3We need only consider only the electrons of ethylene and 1,3-butadiene. We can ignore 1,3the framework of bonds in each molecule.
The MOs of Ethylene Red and blue colors distinguish sign of wave function. Bonding MO is antisymmetric with respect to plane of molecule.
The MOs of Ethylene Antibonding orbital of ethylene; no electrons in this orbital. LUMO
HOMO Bonding orbital of ethylene; two electrons in this orbital. Bonding orbital of ethylene; two electrons in this orbital.
Four p orbitals contribute to the system of 1,31,3butadiene; therefore, there are four molecular orbitals. Two of these orbitals are bonding; two are antibonding. antibonding.
HOMO
4 electrons; 2 in each orbital.
The Two Antibonding MOs of 1,3-Butadiene 1,3Highest energy orbital 10.17 A Molecular Orbital Analysis of the Diels-Alder Reaction Diels-
LUMO
Both antibonding orbitals are vacant.
MO Analysis of Diels-Alder Reaction DielsHOMO of 1,3-butadiene 1,3HOMO of 1,3-butadiene 1,3and LUMO of ethylene are in phase with one another. Allows bond formation between the alkene and the diene. LUMO of ethylene (dienophile) (dienophile)
Since electron-withdrawing groups increase electronthe reactivity of a dienophile, we assume dienophile, electrons flow from the HOMO of the diene to the LUMO of the dienophile. dienophile.
The dimerization of ethylene to give cyclobutane does not occur under conditions of typical Diels-Alder reactions. Why not? Diels-
A Forbidden" Reaction H2 C H2 C CH2 CH2 HOMO of one ethylene molecule. LUMO of other ethylene molecule.
HOMO-LUMO HOMOmismatch of two ethylene molecules precludes single-step singleformation of two new bonds.