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Conjugated Dienes and Ultraviolet Spectroscopy

Conjugated Dienes and Ultraviolet Spectroscopy. Key Words. Conjugated Diene Resonance Structures Dienophiles Concerted Reaction Pericyclic Reaction Cycloaddition Reaction Bridged Bicyclic Compound Cyclic Compounds Endo Exo. What are Conjugated Dienes?.

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Conjugated Dienes and Ultraviolet Spectroscopy

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  1. Conjugated Dienes and Ultraviolet Spectroscopy

  2. Key Words • Conjugated Diene • Resonance Structures • Dienophiles • Concerted Reaction • Pericyclic Reaction • Cycloaddition Reaction • Bridged Bicyclic Compound • Cyclic Compounds • Endo • Exo

  3. What are Conjugated Dienes? • Conjugated Dienes are carbon structures which maintain 2 double bond separated by a single bond. • Conjugated Dienescan be found in many different molecules as shown. Examples of Conjugated Dienes

  4. Conjugated and Nonconjugated Dienes • If Di = two and ene = double bond then Diene = two double bonds. • If double bonds are separated by only ONE single bond, they are conjugated and their orbitals interact. • The conjugated diene 2,4-heptadiene has properties that are very different from those of the nonconjugated diene, 1,5-heptadiene

  5. Polyenes • Compounds with many alternating single and double bonds. • Extended conjugation leads to absorption of visible light, producing color. • Conjugated hydrocarbons with many double bonds are polyenes (lycopene is responsible for red color in tomatoes) • Extended conjugation in ketones (enones) found in hormones such as progesterone.

  6. Examples of Conjugated Dienes

  7. Preparation and Stability of Conjugated Dienes • Typically by elimination in allylic halide • Specific industrial processes for large scale production of commodities by catalytic dehydrogenation and dehydration. NBS = N-Bromosuccimide (You add a bromine (halogen)) KOC(CH3)3 is a strong base (dehydrohalogenation)

  8. Preparation Conjugated Dienes Dehydration of Alcohols Removal of hydrogens

  9. Stability of Dienes • Conjugated dienes are more stable than nonconjugated dienes based on heats of hydrogenation. • Hydrogenating 1,3-butadiene releases 15 kJ/mol less heat than 1,4-pentadiene.

  10. Molecular Orbital Description of 1,3-Butadiene • The single bond between the conjugated double bonds is shorter and stronger than sp3

  11. Molecular Orbital Description of 1,3-Butadiene • The bonding -orbitals are made from 4 p orbitals that provide greater delocalization and lower energy than in isolated C=C • The 4 molecular orbitals include fewer total nodes than in the isolated case (See Figures 14-1 and 14-2)

  12. Molecular Orbital Description of 1,3-Butadiene • In addition, the single bond between the two double bonds is strengthened by overlap of p orbitals • In summary, we say electrons in 1,3-butadiene are delocalized over the  bond system • Delocalization leads to stabilization

  13. Electrophilic Additions to Conjugated Dienes: Allylic Carbocations • Review: addition of electrophile to C=C • Markovnikov regiochemistry via more stable carbocation

  14. Carbocations from Conjugated Dienes • Addition of H+ leads to delocalized secondary allylic carbocation

  15. Products of Addition to Delocalized Carbocation • Nucleophile can add to either cationic site • The transition states for the two possible products are not equal in energy

  16. Practice Problem 14.1: Products?

  17. Kinetic vs. Thermodynamic Control of Reactions • At completion, all reactions are at equilibrium, and the relative concentrations are controlled by the differences in free energies of reactants and products (Thermodynamic Control) • If a reaction is irreversible or if a reaction is far from equilibrium, then the relative concentrations of products depends on how fast each forms, which is controlled by the relative free energies of the transition states leading to each (Kinetic Control)

  18. Kinetic and Thermodynamic Control Example • Addition to a conjugated diene at or below room temperature normally leads to a mixture of products in which the 1,2 adduct predominates over the 1,4 adduct • At higher temperature, product ratio changes and 1,4 adduct predominates (See Figures 14-4 and 14-5)

  19. What is the Diels-Alder Reaction? The Diels-Alder reaction uses a conjugated diene and a dienophile to produce cyclic and bicyclic carbon structures. This is also called the [4 + 2] cycloaddition reaction for the reaction of 4 pi electrons (diene) and 2 pi electron (dienophile).

  20. Properties of Conjugated Dienes • Conjugated Dienescan undergo resonance which is the movement of a double bond from • Conjugated Dienes can often rotate to either form the s-cis or s-trans (s = single)

  21. What are Dienophiles? • Dienophiles are molecules which maintains a double bond or triple bond. • They are normally bound to electron withdrawing groups or neutral groups.

  22. Diels-Alder Reaction • The Diels Alder reaction uses the resonancemovement of electrons of the conjugated diene in the s-cis configuration with a dienophile to create a cyclicaddition or bridge bicyclic structure. • This reaction works as a concerted reaction or all in one step similar to an SN2 reaction.

  23. Limitations of Diels-Alder Reaction • Does not react with s-trans configuration • Does not react well with dienophiles with electron donating groups.

  24. Products of Diels-Alder Reactions • The products of Diels-Alder reaction are cyclic or ring compounds. • It is also possible to form Bridged Bicyclic Compound by starting with diene found inside ring structures.

  25. Cyclic Product • The reaction produces only one product. • If the reaction occurs with a cis dienophile then the product will be a cis product. • If the reaction occurs with a trans dienophile then the product will be a trans product.

  26. Bridged Bicyclic Products • Often the attachment to the diene moves up creating a bridge while the dienophile binds beneath it. • The diene can bind three ways 1) without stereoselectivity 2) endo and 3) exo.

  27. Endo Product • This is where the dienophile attaches (down) opposite the bridge or functional groups. • Of the Diels-Alder reactions with stero selectivity the Endo product is preferred due to decreased steric strain.

  28. Exo Product • This is where the dienophile attaches (up) same the bridge or functional groups. • Of the Diels-Alder reactions with stero selectivity the Exo product is less favorable due to increased steric strain.

  29. Diels-Alder Examples

  30. Easy Retrosynthesis • Find the double bond • Remove the double bond. • Add double bonds to the adjacent bonds. • Move 2 bond in both directs, remove these new bonds. • Add a double bond to the final bond.

  31. Diels Alder Reaction • Can create carbon carbon single bonds by reacting conjugated diene and a dienophile to produce cyclic and bicyclic carbon structures. • Reacts with electron withdrawing dienophiles or neutral groups. • Works with conjugated dienes in the s-cis configuration. • The Diels-Alder reaction is stereoselective giving cis and trans configuration to the product.

  32. Regiochemistry of the Diels-Alder Reaction • Reactants align to produce endo (rather than exo) product • endo and exo indicate relative stereochemistry in bicyclic structures • Substituent on one bridge is exo if it is anti (trans) to the larger of the other two bridges and endo if it is syn (cis) to the larger of the other two bridges • If the two bridges are equal, the product with the substituent endo to the new double bond is formed.

  33. Conformations of Dienes in the Diels-Alder Reaction • The relative positions of the two double bonds in the diene are the “cis” or “trans” two each other about the single bond (being in a plane maximizes overlap) • These conformations are called s-cis and s-trans (“s” stands for “single bond”) • Dienes react in the s-cis conformation in the Diels-Alder reaction

  34. Practice Problem 14.2:

  35. Solution:

  36. Problem 14.7 (p. 478):

  37. Reaction Mechanism:

  38. Solution:

  39. Unreactive Dienes

  40. Reactive Diene: cyclopentadiene

  41. Experiment 49:

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