Does Kekulene have Kekulé vibrational modes? Yes!

October 19th, 2019

Increasingly, individual small molecules are having their structures imaged using STM, including cyclo[18]carbon that I recently discussed. The latest one receiving such treatment is Kekulene.[cite]10.1021/jacs.9b07926[/cite]

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Catalytic Mitsunobu reaction.

October 9th, 2019

If, as a synthetic chemist, you want to invert the configuration of an alcohol in which the OH group is at a chiral centre, then the Mitsunobu reaction has been a stalwart for many years. Now a catalytic version has been published, [cite]10.1126/science.aax3353[/cite] along with a proposed mechanism. Here I apply computation as a reality check to see what the energetics of this mechanism might be.

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Bond length alternation (BLA) in large conjugated rings: an (anti-aromatic) update.

October 3rd, 2019

In the previous post, I looked at a class of molecule known as hexaphyrins, inspecting bond length alternation (BLA) at the so-called meso position, the carbon atom joining two pyrrole rings. A search of the difference in bond lengths at this position had shown two significant clusters of crystal structures.
Molecules in the bottom left of this diagram shows little or no bond length alternation. The right middle shows another cluster with more extreme (and unequal) bond length alternation. I have selected one molecule from this cluster, EGIJEK and it differs from EGIHUY in having four NH units in the ring, whereas the latter has only two.

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Bond length alternation (BLA) in large aromatic rings: an experimental reality check.

September 30th, 2019

The theme of the last three posts derives from the recently reported claimed experimental observation of bond length alternation (BLA) in cyclo[18]carbon, a ring of just 18 carbon atoms.[cite]10.1126/science.aay1914[/cite] Having found that different forms of quantum calculation seem to find this property particularly difficult to agree upon, not only for cyclocarbon but for twisted lemniscular annulenes (which contain CH rather than just C units), I thought it might be time to look at some more experimental data and my chosen system is a class called the hexaphyrins, of which there are a number of experimental crystal structures.

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The Kekulé vibration as a function of aromatic ring size. A different perspective using lemniscular rings.

September 27th, 2019

In the previous posts, I tried to track down the onset of bond length alternation (BLA) as a function of ring size in aromatic cyclocarbons, finding the answer varied dramatically depending on the type of method used to calculate it. So here I change the system to an unusual kind of aromatic ring, the leminiscular or figure-eight annulene series. I explore the Kekulé vibration for such species for which a 4n+2 π electron count means they are cyclically Möbius aromatic.[cite]10.1016/j.comptc.2014.09.028[/cite]

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Cyclo[6] and [10]carbon. The Kekulé vibrations compared.

September 3rd, 2019

In the previous post, I looked at the so-called Kekulé vibration of cyclo[18]carbon using various quantum methods and basis sets.  Because some of these procedures can take a very long time,  I could not compare them using the same high-quality consistent atom basis set for the carbon (Def2-TZVPP). Here I try to start to do this using the smaller six and ten carbon rings to see what trends might emerge. FAIR data are at DOI: 10.14469/hpc/6069

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Cyclo[18]carbon: The Kekulé vibration calculated and hence a mystery!

August 30th, 2019

I have discussed the vibration in benzene known as the Kekulé mode in other posts, the first of which was all of ten years ago. It is a stretching mode that lengthens three of the bonds in benzene (a [6]-annulene) and shortens the other three, thus leading to a cyclohexatriene motif (see below). This vibration is real (+ve force constant) in benzene itself, which indicates that distorting the structure from six to three-fold symmetry leads to an increase in energy. Benzene therefore has a symmetrising influence, and it comes as a surprise to most to learn that this is actually due to the σ rather than the π-electrons! But there are good reasons to believe that as the ring size of the annulene increases, the Kekulé vibration will evolve from a real mode into an imaginary (-ve force constant) vibration representing a transition state for mutating the single and double bonds. At some point therefore, the more symmetrical geometry of the annulene in which all the bonds are of equal length will change into one of lower symmetry, in which BLA (bond length alternation) occurs and the symmetrical form becomes a transition state for this process.

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A Non-nitrogen Containing Morpholine Isostere; an application of FAIR data principles.

August 4th, 2019

In the pipeline reports on an intriguing new ring system acting as an isostere for morpholine. I was interested in how the conformation of this ring system might be rationalised electronically and so I delved into the article.[cite]10.1021/acs.jmedchem.9b00348[/cite] Here I recount what I found.

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CH…O hydrogen bonding competing with layered dispersion attractions.

July 19th, 2019

I have previously looked at the topic of hydrogen bonding interactions from the hydrogen of chloroform Here I generalize C-H…O interactions by conducting searches of the CSD (Cambridge structure database) as a function of the carbon hybridisation. I am going to jump straight to a specific molecule XEVJIR (DOI: 10.5517/cc5fgpq) identified from the searches appended to this post as interesting for further inspection.[cite]10.1021/jo001484k[/cite]

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Metadata. Why?

July 2nd, 2019

I have had some interesting discussions recently regarding metadata. What emerges is that it can be quite a broadly defined concept and it is clear that a variety of answers might be obtained when asking the simple question “what is it useful for?” Here I set out some of my answers to that question.

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