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Ch. 14 - Chapter 14 Chapter 14 Aromatic Compounds Aromatic Compounds Modified from sides of William Tam & Phillis Chang

Ch. 14 - 1 Chapter 14 Aromatic Compounds Modified from sides of William Tam & Phillis Chang

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Page 1: Ch. 14 - 1 Chapter 14 Aromatic Compounds Modified from sides of William Tam & Phillis Chang

Ch. 14 - 1

Chapter 14Chapter 14

Aromatic CompoundsAromatic Compounds

Modified from sides of William Tam & Phillis Chang

Page 2: Ch. 14 - 1 Chapter 14 Aromatic Compounds Modified from sides of William Tam & Phillis Chang

Nomenclature

Naming monosubstituted benzenesMost: benzene is the parent name and the substituent is a prefix

benzene

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Other simple, common benzenes, have accepted parent name (for substituent and ring)

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Disubstituted benzenesWith two substituents:

Their relative positions are indicated by prefixesor numbers : ortho- (abbreviated o-, or 1,2-) meta-, (m- , 1,3-) para-, (p- , 1,4-)

Page 5: Ch. 14 - 1 Chapter 14 Aromatic Compounds Modified from sides of William Tam & Phillis Chang

examples

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Dimethylbenzenes = xylenes

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More than two groups1. Positions must be indicated by numbers

2. Number the benzene ring to giveSubstituents the lowest possible numbers

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More than two different substituents list in alphabetical order

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A substituent gives “special” base name (aniline, anisole, etc.) that substituent is position 1

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Benzene as a substituent = phenyl group (C6H5)

hydrocarbon with saturated chain and 1 benzene ring Base/parent is the larger structural unit.

butylbenzene t-butylbenzene (S)-2-phenylheptane

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Unsaturated chains, the parent/base name is of that chain, (regardless of ring size)

trans-1-phenyl-2-butene

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Benzyl (Bn) is a common name for the phenylmethyl group

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recall

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substitution not additionReactions of Benzene

[+ HBr] substitution

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The Kekulé Structure for Benzene

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These 1,2-dibromobenzenes are not isomers

RESONANCE

or an equilibrium

X

X

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+ other Br2 additons

However

aromatic character?

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3-D structure

π-electrons above and below ring

Note: Planar structure All carbons sp2 hybridized

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Hückel’s Rule: The 4n + 2 π Electron Rule

(1) Planar monocyclic rings (2) containing 4n + 2 π electrons, where n = 0

or an integer (2, 6, 10, 14 . . .etc.) have substantial resonance energies, “aromatic”

i.e. a planar ring containing 6 π electrons is “aromatic”

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Hückel’s rule states that planar monocyclic rings with 2, 6, 10, 14 . . . delocalized electrons should be aromatic

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How To Diagram the Relative Energies of p How To Diagram the Relative Energies of p Molecular Orbitals in Monocyclics Molecular Orbitals in Monocyclics Based on HückelBased on Hückel’’s Rules Rule

circledpolygon

antibonding orbitals

nonbonding orbitals

bonding orbitals

type of orbitals

orbitalenergy levels

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π molecular orbitals of cyclooctatetraene, if planar Predicted to have 2 nonbonding orbitals and

an unpaired electron in each nonbonding orbital

Not be expected to be aromatic

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System not planar

The bonds alternately long and short; (1.48 and 1.34 Å)

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The AnnulenesThe Annulenes

Hückel’s rule predicts that annulenes will be aromatic

if the molecule has 4n + 2 π electrons and have a planar carbon skeleton

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All these (4n + 2)π, planar annulenes are aromatic

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Non-planar (4n + 2)π annulenes are antiaromatic

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(4n) non-planar annulenes are antiaromatic

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NMR Spectroscopy: Evidence for ElectronNMR Spectroscopy: Evidence for Electron Delocalization in Aromatic CompoundsDelocalization in Aromatic Compounds

1H NMR spectrum 1H occurs at relatively high frequencyIs compelling evidence for aromaticity

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(δ -3.0)

(δ 9.3)

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Aromatic Ions

pka = 16 pka = 36

pKa unsaturated and saturated hydrocarbon 44-53

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sp3 sp2

6 π electrons aromatic

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strong base

LA

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Aromatic, Antiaromatic, and Nonaromatic Aromatic, Antiaromatic, and Nonaromatic CompoundsCompounds

An aromatic compound has its π electrons delocalized over the entire ring and

It is stabilized by the π-electron delocalization

Evaluation: compare cyclic compound vs acyclic with same number of electrons.

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Ring is aromatic if the ring has lower -electron energy then the acyclic chain

Based on sound calculations or experiments

Nonaromatic if the ring and the chain have the same -electron energy [non-planar]

Antiaromatic if the ring has greater π-electron energy than the open chain [4n e’s]

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Cyclobutadiene

Benzene

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Other Aromatic Compounds

Benzenoid polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons having two or more fused benzene rings.

Benzenoid Aromatic CompoundsBenzenoid Aromatic Compounds

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Nonbenzenoid Aromatic CompoundsNonbenzenoid Aromatic Compounds

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FullerenesFullerenes

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Heterocyclic Aromatic Compoundsheterocyclic compounds cyclic compounds with an

element(s) other than carbon, e.g. piperidine

aromatic heterocyclic:

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Examples of useful heterocyclic aromatic compounds

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Aromaticity

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Basicity of nitrogen-containing heterocycles

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Basicity of nitrogen-containing heterocycles

poor base:

loss of aromaticity

still aromaticityimidazolearomatic weak base

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Aromatic Compounds in Biochemistry

Two amino acids necessary for protein synthesis contain the benzene ring

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Derivatives of purine and pyrimidine are essential parts of DNA and RNA

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Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide important coenzymes in oxidations and reductions

-pyridine derivative (nicotinamide) -purine derivative (adenine)

O O