1 / 44

Aromaticity

jennica
Télécharger la présentation

Aromaticity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. Aromaticity 4/19/06

    2. Cyclobutadiene & Cyclooctatetraene

    3. Hckels Rule - Annulenes

    4. Constructing the p-Orbital MO Diagrams

    5. Interpreting the MO Figure

    6. Hckels 4n+2 Rule Monocyclic planar, fully conjugated polyenes are called annulenes. Among annulenes, only those possessing 4n+2 p electrons, where n is an integer, will have special aromatic stability. Planarity and complete conjugation are important criteria. The 4n+2 rule may be fulfilled for neutral or ionic moieties.

    7. Cycloheptatriene & the Cycloheptatrienyl Cation

    8. The Cycloheptatrienyl Cation p-MO Diagram

    9. Additional Aromatic Ions

    10. A Couple More Examples

    11. Heterocyclic Aromatic Compounds

    12. Where are Those Lone Pairs?

    13. Some Interesting Heterocycles

    14. Polycyclic Aromatic Heterocycles

    15. DNA & RNA Bases

    16. Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution

    17. Substitution Directly on the Benzene Ring

    18. What do Reactants See?

    19. Electrophilic Attack; Aromatics vs. Alkenes

    20. Nitration of Benzene

    21. Mechanism for the Nitration of Benzene

    22. Sulfonation of Benzene

    23. Mechanism for the Sulfonation of Benzene

    24. Bromination and Chlorination of Benzene

    25. Bromination Mechanism

    26. Friedel-Crafts Alkylation of Benzene

    27. The Mechanism

    28. The Limitation!

    29. Friedel-Crafts Acylation of Benzene

    30. Activation of Propanoyl Chloride

    31. To Rearrange or Not to Rearrange

    32. Two Step Synthesis of Alkyl Benzenes

    33. Rate and Regioselectivity in Aromatic Substitution Does the presence of a substituent on a benzene ring influence the addition of other substituents? If so, what are the effects and can they be useful? Possible effects: Rate of substitution and position of the added substituent. Rates of electrophilic aromatic substitution are generally compared with benzene. An activating substituent causes subsequent substitution to be faster than that for benzene. A deactivating substituent causes subsequent substitution to be slower.

    34. Rates of Substitution and Activation Energy

    35. An Estimate of Eact Using ab initio calculations, a value for EHOMO can be estimated. The program SPARTAN was used in this case employing a 631G** basis set. The activation for the formation of the respective cations can be roughly approximated with the energy necessary to remove an electron from the benzene derivative p-system. Because of the nature of ab initio calculations comparisons of relative energies is appropriate. In this case we will use EHOMO for benzene as the reference. EHOMO for toluene is 19.05 kJ/mol higher (less negative) than that for benzene. For trifluoromethylbenzene the value is 54.72 kJ/mol lower (more negative) than that for benzene.

    37. A Visual Comparison The same theoretical calculations used to estimated the energy of the HOMO also can be used to produce some visible aids to compare the three molecules.

    38. Regioselectivity in Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution

    39. Theory of Directing Effects For ortho-para directors, ortho-para attack forms a more stable cation than meta attack ortho-para products are formed faster than meta products For meta directors, meta attack forms a more stable cation than ortho-para attack meta products are formed faster than ortho-para products

    40. Theory of Directing Effects -NO2: assume ortho-para attack

    41. Theory of Directing Effects -OCH3: assume ortho-para attack

    42. Di- and Polysubstitution the order of steps is important

    43. Di- and Polysubstitution From the information, we can make these generalizations alkyl, phenyl, and all other groups in which the atom bonded to the ring has an unshared pair of electrons are ortho-para directing. All other groups are meta directing all ortho-para directing groups except the halogens are activating toward further substitution. The halogens are weakly deactivating

    44. Di- and Polysubstitution

More Related