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1.
J Org Chem ; 73(3): 912-22, 2008 Feb 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18161986

RESUMEN

The ene reaction between 4-phenyl-1,2,4-triazoline-3,5-dione (PTAD) and tetramethylethylene has been investigated using QM/MM calculations in water, methanol, DMSO, and acetonitrile. The effects of solvation on the mechanism and rates of reaction are elucidated using two-dimensional potentials of mean force (PMF) simulations utilizing free-energy perturbation theory and Monte Carlo statistical mechanics. A new mechanism is proposed where direct formation of an open dipolar intermediate following the addition of PTAD to the alkene is rate-limiting and the pathway toward ene product is significantly dependent on the reaction medium. In protic solvents, the open dipolar intermediate may proceed directly to the ene product or reversibly form an aziridinium imide (AI) intermediate that does not participate in the reaction. However, in aprotic solvents the open intermediate is short-lived (<10-11 s) and the ene product forms via the AI intermediate. The calculated free energies of activation are in close agreement with those derived from experiment, e.g., DeltaG of 14.9 kcal/mol compared to 15.0 kcal/mol in acetonitrile. Density functional theory calculations at the (U)B3LYP/6-311++G(2d,p) level using the CPCM continuum solvent model were also carried out and confirmed a zwitterionic, and not diradical, open intermediate present in the reaction. Only the QM/MM methodology was able to accurately reproduce the experimental rates and differentiate between the protic and aprotic solvents. Solute-solvent interaction energies, radial distribution functions, and charges are analyzed and show that the major factor dictating the changes in reaction path is hydrogen bond stabilization of the charge separations spanning 2 to 4 atoms in the intermediates and transition states.

2.
Org Lett ; 9(26): 5405-8, 2007 Dec 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18031050

RESUMEN

A non-equilibrating mixture of two aziridinium imides (AIs) resulting from the photoaddition of N-methyl-1,2,4-triazoline-3,5-dione and cycloheptene has been prepared. Warming the AIs produces only the product of the expected ene reaction with no back-reaction to starting materials. Even though one of the pair does not have the geometry necessary for hydrogen abstraction, both AIs disappear at essentially the same rate, showing that AIs cannot be the direct precursors of the ene product.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 127(45): 15983-8, 2005 Nov 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16277543

RESUMEN

There is a discrepancy between the observed and calculated stability of trans-cycloheptene (t-CHP). Generation of t-CHP has always led to its low-temperature (-40 degrees C) isomerization to cis-cycloheptene (c-CHP). However, force field and semiempirical calculations on the energy difference between the two isomers have suggested that t-CHP should be stable at room temperature. We performed a series of ab initio calculations, which predicted that the simple process of double bond rotation leading from t-CHP to c-CHP would have an activation barrier too high to permit isomerization below 100 degrees C (35 kcal/mol). The validity of our calculation method on this very strained system was supported by the agreement between the calculation and the dynamics of the ring flip of the unsymmetrical t-CHP ring and the observed NMR shifts and coupling constants for the system. This incompatibility between the experimental behavior of t-CHP and our calculations led to our reexamining the decay kinetics of t-CHP. We find that this decay is second order and represents an "interrupted" dimerization, where an initially formed 1,4-biradical rapidly changes its geometry and cleaves back to produce two c-CHP molecules. This mechanism was supported by calculations of the 1,4-biradical potential energy surface.

4.
J Org Chem ; 70(17): 6564-73, 2005 Aug 19.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16095272

RESUMEN

The s-trans/s-cis conformational equilibria of 10 methyl-substituted 1,3-butadienes [(E)- and (Z)-1,3-pentadiene; 2-methyl-1,3-butadiene; (E)-2-methyl-1,3-pentadiene; 2,3-dimethyl-1,3-butadiene; (E,E)-, (E,Z)-, and (Z,Z)-2,4-hexadiene; 2,5-dimethyl-2,4-hexadiene; and (E,E)-2,4-dimethyl-2,4-hexadiene] were explored by trapping high-temperature conformational equilibria by cryogenic deposition. The vapor state enthalpy differences of these s-trans/s-cis conformers, DeltaH(t equilibrium c), were determined by varying the equilibrating temperature and integrating the resulting matrix isolated IR spectra. The results obtained are in good agreement with ab initio calculations at the G3 level. From these thermodynamic parameters, methyl group nonbonded interactions in conjugated 1,3-butadienes were delineated. Rates of decay of s-cis conformers to their s-trans rotamers were obtained in the solid-state by warming up trapped high-temperature equilibrated samples formed from neat depositions. These data were analyzed in terms of dispersive kinetics with matrix site effects in the solid-state modeled by a Gaussian distribution of activation energies. The activation barriers thus obtained were compared with G3 calculations of the enthalpies of activation.

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