9 Stereo MSC 4
9 Stereo MSC 4
9 Stereo MSC 4
References
1. Stereochemistry of organic compounds, Ernest L Eliel, Samuel H.Wilen, A Wliley Inter Science
publication 2004
2. F.A.Carey and R.J. Sundberg, Advanced Organic Chemistry, Part A and Part B, 5th edition, Springer,
New York (2007).
3. P.S.Kalsi Stereochemistry And Mechanism (Through Solved Problems), New Age International, New
Delhi,2007
Sigma bonds and bond rotation
Groups bonded only by a sigma bond can undergo
rotation about that bond with respect to each other.
The temporary molecular shapes that result from
rotations of groups about single bonds are called
conformation of the molecule.
3
• Names are given to two different conformations.
• In the eclipsed conformation, the C—H bonds on one
carbon are directly aligned with the C—H bonds on the
adjacent carbon.
• In the staggered conformation, the C—H bonds on one
carbon bisect the H—C—H bond angle on the adjacent
carbon.
4
• Rotating the atoms on one carbon by 60° converts an eclipsed
conformation into a staggered conformation, and vice versa.
• The angle that separates a bond on one atom from a bond on an
adjacent atom is called a dihedral angle. For ethane in the staggered
conformation, the dihedral angle for the C—H bonds is 60°. For eclipsed
ethane, it is 0°.
5
Let us consider the ethane molecule as an example
H
H
H
The staggered conformation of ethane
H
H ÒÒÍéµÄ½»²æʽ¹¹Ïó
H
H
H The eclipsed conformation of ethane
H
ÒÒÍéµÄÖصþʽ¹¹Ïó
H
H
H
Ethane
(Sawhorse formula)
Newman Projection formula
H
H
H H H
H
The staggered conformation of ethane
H
H H H ÒÒÍéµÄ½»²æʽ¹¹Ïó
H
H
H H H
H
H
H The eclipsed conformation of ethane
H
H H H ÒÒÍéµÄÖصþʽ¹¹Ïó
H H
H
H H The bonds of the front carbon atom
are represented (ǰ̼£©
H H
H
• Sawhorse Drawings
• The staggered and eclipsed conformations of ethane interconvert at room
temperature, but each conformer is not equally stable.
• The staggered conformations are more stable (lower in energy) than the
eclipsed conformations.
• Electron-electron repulsion between bonds in the eclipsed conformation
increases its energy compared with the staggered conformation, where
the bonding electrons are farther apart.
13
Individual molecule is likely to be in the staggered conformation
at any given instant, but each molecule can rapidly traverse
through the eclipsed conformation. The rate of rotation is about
6×109 s−1 at 250C
16
Discussion
In ethane the difference in energy between the
staggered and eclipsed conformation is 2.8 kcal mol-1
(12 KJ mol-1). This small barrier to rotation is called
the torsion barrier of the single bond . Unless the
temperature is extremely low (-250 oC) many ethane
molecules will have enough energy to surmount this
barrier.
Newman projections for the staggered and eclipsed
conformations of propane
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Conformational analysis of butane
C4H10
H H H H H H
H C C C C H CH3 C C CH3
H H H H H H
Conformation of Butane
• The energy difference between the lowest and highest energy conformations is
called a barrier to rotation.
• Since the lowest energy conformation has all bonds staggered and all large
groups anti, alkanes are often drawn in zigzag skeletal structures to indicate
this.
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Relationship to Gauche Butane
Interactions
• Gauche butane is less stable than anti butane by 3.8 kJ/mol because of
steric interference between hydrogen atoms on the two methyl groups
• The four-carbon fragment of axial methylcyclohexane and gauche butane
have the same steric interaction
• In general, equatorial positions give more stable isomer
Six different conformations of butane
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We should look at the important conformations of butane
Anti An Eclipsed
gauche An eclipsed
• A staggered conformation with two larger groups 180° from each
other is called anti.
• A staggered conformation with two larger groups 60° from each
other is called gauche.
• The staggered conformations are lower in energy than the eclipsed
conformations.
• The relative energies of the individual staggered conformations
depend on their steric strain.
• Steric strain is an increase in energy resulting when atoms are
forced too close to one another.
• Gauche conformations are generally higher in energy than anti
conformations because of steric strain.
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• An energy minimum and maximum occur every 60° as the
conformation changes from staggered to eclipsed. Conformations
that are neither staggered nor eclipsed are intermediate in energy.
• Butane and higher molecular weight alkanes have several C—C
bonds, all capable of rotation. It takes six 60° rotations to return to
the original conformation.
Energy
CH3CH3
H CH3 H H CH3
H H
H H CH3
H H H H
CH3 H
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The potential energy diagram of n-butane resembles that of
ethane in having three maxima and three minima, but differs in
that one of the minima is lower than the other two and one of
the maxima is of higher energy than the other two.
The two gauche conformations are raised in energy relative to the anti by an
energy increment resulting from the van der Waals repulsion between the two
methyl groups of 0.6 kcal/mol.
The van der Waals repulsion between methyl and hydrogen is smaller in the
other eclipsed conformations.
The methyl/methyl eclipsed barrier is not known precisely, but the range in
experimental and theoretical values is between 4.0 and 6.6 kcal/mol, with the
most recent values being at the low end of the range
The conformation of other simple hydrocarbons can be interpreted
by extensions of the principles illustrated in the analysis of
rotational barriers in ethane and n-butane.
The chair conformation is so stable because it eliminates angle strain (all C—C—C
angles are 109.5°), and torsional strain (all hydrogens on adjacent C atoms are
staggered).
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• In cyclohexane, three C atoms pucker up and three C atoms pucker down, alternating
around the ring.
• Each C in cyclohexane has two different kinds of hydrogens: (1) axial hydrogens are located
above and below the ring (along a perpendicular axis); (2) equatorial hydrogens are
located in the plane of the ring (around the equator).
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Each carbon atom in cyclohexane has one axial and one equatorial hydrogen
Six axial hydrogens perpendicular to the ring (parallel to the ring axis) and six equatorial hydrogens
near the plane of the ring
HH H H H H
H
H
Unstable (the ecli
48
Ring-flipping interconverts axial and equatorial
hydrogens in cyclohexane
49
Flipping Chair Conformations
• All axial bonds become equatorial
• All equatorial bonds become axial
• All “up” bonds stay up
• All “down” bonds stay down
The inversion of chair conformation
a a
a e
e e
e
e
e
a
a a
a-bond e-bond
e-bond a-bond
axial up
eq. up
Axial-up becomes Equatorial-up
The inversion of conformations
Chair Half-chair
10
Boat
The twist and the boat conformations are more flexible than the chair,
but are destabilized by torsional strain, as the bonds along the “sides” of
the boat are eclipsed.
Both this van der Waals repulsion and the torsional strain are somewhat
reduced in the twist Conformation.
The first-order rate constant for ring inversion is 104–105 sec−1 at
270C. The enthalpy of activation is 10.8 kcal/mol.
The boat lies 1–2 kcal/mol above the twist-boat conformation and is
a transition state for interconversion of twist forms
• The chair forms of cyclohexane are 7 kcal/mol more stable than the boat
forms.
• The boat conformation is destabilized by torsional strain because the
hydrogens on the four carbon atoms in the plane are eclipsed.
• Additionally, there is steric strain because two hydrogens at either end of
the boat, the “flag pole” hydrogens, are forced close to each other.
Figure 4.14
Two views of the boat
conformation of cyclohexane
60