Computational and Experimental Evidence of Two Competing Thermal Electrocyclization Pathways for Vinylheptafulvene
The thermal electrocyclic ring‐closure reaction of vinylheptafulvene (VHF) to form dihydroazulene (DHA) is elucidated herein by using DFT and 1H NMR spectroscopy. Two different transition states were found computationally; one corresponds to a disrotatory pathway, which is allowed according to the W...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Chemistry, an Asian journal an Asian journal, 2019-04, Vol.14 (8), p.1111-1116 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The thermal electrocyclic ring‐closure reaction of vinylheptafulvene (VHF) to form dihydroazulene (DHA) is elucidated herein by using DFT and 1H NMR spectroscopy. Two different transition states were found computationally; one corresponds to a disrotatory pathway, which is allowed according to the Woodward–Hoffmann selection rules, whereas the other corresponds to a conrotatory pathway. The conrotatory pathway is found to be zwitterionic in the transition state, whereas the disrotatory transition state varies in zwitterionic character depending on solvent and substituents in the molecular framework. The conrotatory and disrotatory transition states are found to have similar energy and their relative stability varies with solvent polarity and functionalization at the C1 position. To support these findings, we chemically ring‐opened diastereomerically pure 1‐(benzothiazol‐2‐yl)‐DHA to give the VHF form, then subsequently thermally reconverted the VHF to DHA in a range of solvents with various polarities. We found that, depending on solvent polarity, different ratios of anti‐ and syn‐diastereoisomers of DHA were formed in a systematic manner, which supports the existence of two distinct thermal ring‐closure pathways for VHF.
This way or that? The conversion of X‐vinylheptafulvene (VHF; X=substituent) to the syn or anti diastereoisomers of X‐dihydroazulene (DHA) occurs following a conrotation or disrotation electrocyclic ring‐closure pathway, respectively. Theory and proton NMR spectroscopy show that these two pathways are in competition and result in a systematic change in syn/anti yields with solvent polarity (see figure; WH=Woodward–Hoffmann). |
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ISSN: | 1861-4728 1861-471X |
DOI: | 10.1002/asia.201800437 |