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The Azulene-to-Naphthalene Rearrangement Revisited: a DFT Study of Intramolecular and Radical-Promoted Mechanisms
- Source :
- Journal of the American Chemical Society. 125:5375-5387
- Publication Year :
- 2003
- Publisher :
- American Chemical Society (ACS), 2003.
-
Abstract
- Intramolecular and radical-promoted mechanisms for the rearrangement of azulene to naphthalene are assessed with the aid of density functional calculations. All intramolecular mechanisms have very high activation energies (/=350 kJ mol(-1) from azulene) and so can only be competitive at temperatures above 1000 degrees C. Two radical-promoted mechanisms, the methylene walk and spiran pathways, dominate the reaction below this temperature. The activation energy for an orbital symmetry-allowed mechanism via a bicyclobutane intermediate is 382 kJ mol(-1). The norcaradiene-vinylidene mechanism that has been proposed in order to explain the formation of small amounts of 1-phenyl-1-buten-3-ynes from flash thermolysis of azulene has an activation energy of 360 kJ mol(-1); subtle features of the B3LYP/6-31G(d) energy surface for this mechanism are discussed. All intermediates and transition states on the spiran and methylene walk radical-promoted pathways have been located at the B3LYP/6-31G(d) level. Interconversion of all n-H-azulyl radicals via hydrogen shifts was also examined, and hydrogen shifts around the five-membered ring are competitive with the mechanisms leading to rearrangement to naphthalene, but those around the seven-membered ring are not. Conversion of a tricyclic radical to the 9-H-naphthyl radical is the rate-limiting transition state on the spiran pathway, and lies 164.0 kJ mol(-1) above that of the 1-H-azulyl radical. The transition state for the degenerate hydrogen shift between the 9-H-azulyl and 10-H-azulyl radicals is 7.4 kJ mol(-1) lower. Partial equilibration of the intermediates in the spiran pathway via this shift may therefore occur, and this can account for the surprising formation of 1-methylnaphthalene from 2-methylazulene. The rate-limiting transition state for the methylene walk pathway involves the concerted transfer of a methylene group from one ring to the other and lies 182.3 kJ mol(-1) above that of the 1-H-azulyl radical. It is shown that rearrangement via a combination of 31% methylene walk and 69% spiran pathways can account semiquantitatively for all the products from 1-(13)C-azulene, 9-(13)C-azulene, and 4,7-(13)C(2)-azulene, in addition to accounting for the products from methylazulenes, and the formation of naphthalene-d(0) and -d(2) from azulene-4-d. It is also pointed out that a small extension to the spiran pathway could provide an alternative explanation for the formation of 1-phenyl-1-buten-3-ynes.
Details
- ISSN :
- 15205126 and 00027863
- Volume :
- 125
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6ebafc1576fe6e6658ffe317d7ae53f9
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ja029584q