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Created by Professor William Tam & Dr. Phillis Chang Ch. 13 - 1 Chapter 13 Conjugated Unsaturated Systems
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Ch. 13- 2 About The Authors These PowerPoint Lecture Slides were created and prepared by Professor William Tam and his wife, Dr. Phillis Chang. Professor William Tam received his B.Sc. at the University of Hong Kong in 1990 and his Ph.D. at the University of Toronto (Canada) in 1995. He was an NSERC postdoctoral fellow at the Imperial College (UK) and at Harvard University (USA). He joined the Department of Chemistry at the University of Guelph (Ontario, Canada) in 1998 and is currently a Full Professor and Associate Chair in the department. Professor Tam has received several awards in research and teaching, and according to Essential Science Indicators, he is currently ranked as the Top 1% most cited Chemists worldwide. He has published four books and over 80 scientific papers in top international journals such as J. Am. Chem. Soc., Angew. Chem., Org. Lett., and J. Org. Chem. Dr. Phillis Chang received her B.Sc. at New York University (USA) in 1994, her M.Sc. and Ph.D. in 1997 and 2001 at the University of Guelph (Canada). She lives in Guelph with her husband, William, and their son, Matthew.
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Ch. 13 - 3 1.Introduction A conjugated system involves at least one atom with a p orbital adjacent to at least one bond ●e.g.
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Ch. 13 - 4 2.Allylic Substitution and the Allyl Radical vinylic carbons (sp 2 ) allylic carbon (sp 3 )
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Ch. 13 - 5 2A.Allylic Chlorination (High Temperature)
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Ch. 13 - 6 Mechanism ●Chain initiation ●Chain propagation
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Ch. 13 - 7 Mechanism ●Chain propagation ●Chain termination
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Ch. 13 - 8
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Ch. 13 - 9
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Ch. 13 - 10
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Ch. 13 - 11 2B.Allylic Bromination with N-Bromo- succinimide (Low Concentration of Br 2 ) NBS is a solid and nearly insoluble in CCl 4 ●Low concentration of Br
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Ch. 13 - 12 Examples
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Ch. 13 - 13 3. The Stability of the Allyl Radical 3A.Molecular Orbital Description of the Allyl Radical
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Ch. 13 - 14
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Ch. 13 - 15 3B.Resonance Description of the Allyl Radical
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Ch. 13 - 16 4.The Allyl Cation Relative order of Carbocation stability
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Ch. 13 - 17 5.Resonance Theory Revisited 5A. Rules for Writing Resonance Structures Resonance structures exist only on paper. Although they have no real existence of their own, resonance structures are useful because they allow us to describe molecules, radicals, and ions for which a single Lewis structure is inadequate We connect these structures by double- headed arrows ( ), and we say that the hybrid of all of them represents the real molecule, radical, or ion
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Ch. 13 - 18 In writing resonance structures, we are only allowed to move electrons resonance structures not resonance structures
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Ch. 13 - 19 All of the structures must be proper Lewis structures 10 electrons! X not a proper Lewis structure
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Ch. 13 - 20 All resonance structures must have the same number of unpaired electrons X
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Ch. 13 - 21 All atoms that are part of the delocalized -electron system must lie in a plane or be nearly planar no delocalization of -electrons delocalization of -electrons
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Ch. 13 - 22 The energy of the actual molecule is lower than the energy that might be estimated for any contributing structure Equivalent resonance structures make equal contributions to the hybrid, and a system described by them has a large resonance stabilization
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Ch. 13 - 23 The more stable a structure is (when taken by itself), the greater is its contribution to the hybrid
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Ch. 13 - 24 5B.Estimating the Relative Stability of Resonance Structures The more covalent bonds a structure has, the more stable it is
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Ch. 13 - 25 Structures in which all of the atoms have a complete valence shell of electrons (i.e., the noble gas structure) are especially stable and make large contributions to the hybrid this carbon has 6 electrons this carbon has 8 electrons
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Ch. 13 - 26 Charge separation decreases stability
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Ch. 13 - 27 6.Alkadienes and Polyunsaturated Hydrocarbons Alkadienes (“Dienes”)
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Ch. 13 - 28 Alkatrienes (“Trienes”)
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Ch. 13 - 29 Alkadiynes (“Diynes”) Alkenynes (“Enynes”)
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Ch. 13 - 30 Cumulenes enantiomers
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Ch. 13 - 31 Conjugated dienes Isolated double bonds
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Ch. 13 - 32 7.1,3-Butadiene: Electron Delocalization 7A.Bond Lengths of 1,3-Butadiene 1.34 Å 1.47 Å 1.54 Å1.50 Å 1.46 Å sp 3 sp sp 3 sp 2
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Ch. 13 - 33 7B.Conformations of 1,3-Butadiene cis trans single bond single bond
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Ch. 13 - 34 7C.Molecular Orbitals of 1,3-Butadiene
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Ch. 13 - 35 8.The Stability of Conjugated Dienes Conjugated alkadienes are thermodynamically more stable than isomeric isolated alkadienes
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Ch. 13 - 36
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Ch. 13 - 37 9.Ultraviolet–Visible Spectroscopy The absorption of UV–Vis radiation is caused by transfer of energy from the radiation beam to electrons that can be excited to higher energy orbitals
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Ch. 13 - 38 9A.The Electromagnetic Spectrum
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Ch. 13 - 39 9B.UV – Vis Spectrophotometers
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Ch. 13 - 40
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Ch. 13 - 41 Beer’s law A=absorbance =molar absorptivity c=concentration ℓ =path length A= x c x ℓ A c x ℓ or = ●e.g. 2,5-Dimethyl-2,4-hexadiene max (methanol) 242.5 nm ( = 13,100)
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Ch. 13 - 42 9C.Absorption Maxima for Nonconjugated and Conjugated Dienes
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Ch. 13 - 43
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Ch. 13 - 44 9D. Analytical Uses of UV – Vis Spectroscopy UV–Vis spectroscopy can be used in the structure elucidation of organic molecules to indicate whether conjugation is present in a given sample A more widespread use of UV–Vis spectroscopy, however, has to do with determining the concentration of an unknown sample Quantitative analysis using UV–Vis spectroscopy is routinely used in biochemical studies to measure the rates of enzymatic reactions
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Ch. 13 - 45 10.Electrophilic Attack on Conjugated Dienes: 1,4 Addition
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Ch. 13 - 46 Mechanism X (a) (b)
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Ch. 13 - 47 10A.Kinetic Control versus Thermodynamic Control of a Chemical Reaction
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Ch. 13 - 50 11.The Diels–Alder Reaction: A 1,4-Cycloaddition Reaction of Dienes
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Ch. 13 - 51 e.g.
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Ch. 13 - 52 11A.Factors Favoring the Diels – Alder Reaction ●Type A and Type B are normal Diels-Alder reactions
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Ch. 13 - 53 ●Type C and Type D are Inverse Demand Diels-Alder reactions
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Ch. 13 - 54 Relative rate
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Ch. 13 - 55 Relative rate
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Ch. 13 - 56 Steric effects
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Ch. 13 - 57 11B.Stereochemistry of the Diels – Alder Reaction 1.The Diels–Alder reaction is stereospecific: The reaction is a syn addition, and the configuration of the dienophile is retained in the product
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Ch. 13 - 58
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Ch. 13 - 59 2.The diene, of necessity, reacts in the s-cis rather than in the s-trans conformation X
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Ch. 13 - 60 e.g.
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Ch. 13 - 61 Cyclic dienes in which the double bonds are held in the s-cis conformation are usually highly reactive in the Diels–Alder reaction Relative rate
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Ch. 13 - 62 3.The Diels–Alder reaction occurs primarily in an endo rather than an exo fashion when the reaction is kinetically controlled longest bridge R is exo R is endo
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Ch. 13 - 63 Alder-Endo Rule ●If a dienophile contains activating groups with bonds they will prefer an ENDO orientation in the transition state
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Ch. 13 - 64 e.g.
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Ch. 13 - 65 Stereospecific reaction
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Ch. 13 - 66 Stereospecific reaction
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Ch. 13 - 67 Examples
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Ch. 13 - 68 Diene A reacts 10 3 times faster than diene B even though diene B has two electron-donating methyl groups
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Ch. 13 - 69 Examples
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Ch. 13 - 70 Examples ●Rate of Diene C > Diene D (27 times), but Diene D >> Diene E ●In Diene C, t Bu group electron donating group increase rate ●In Diene E, 2 t Bu group steric effect, cannot adopt s-cis conformation
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Ch. 13 - 71 END OF CHAPTER 13
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