Abstract

The transmission of electronic substituent effects through one or more bicyclo[1.1.1]pentane units has been investigated by ascertaining how a variable substituent at a bridgehead position perturbs the geometry of a phenyl group at the opposite end of the molecule. We have analyzed the molecular structures of many bicyclo[1.1.1]pentane and [n]staffane derivatives of general formula Ph-[C(CH(2))(3)C](n)-X (n = 1-5), as obtained from molecular orbital calculations at the HF/6-31G* and B3LYP/6-311++G** levels of theory. When n = 1, the structural variation of the benzene ring is controlled primarily by the long-range polar effect of X, with significant contributions from electronegativity and pi-transfer effects. The capability of the bicyclo[1.1.1]pentane framework to transmit these short-range effects originates from the rather high electron density inside the cage and the hyperconjugative interactions occurring between substituent and framework. A set of at least two bicyclo[1.1.1]pentane units appears to be necessary to remove most of the electronegativity and pi-transfer effects. In higher [n]staffanes (n >or= 3), the very small variation of the benzene ring geometry is controlled entirely by the long-range polar effect of X. With charged groups and for n >or= 2, the potential energy of the ring deformation decreases linearly with n(-3). In Ph-C(CH(2))(3)C-X molecules, the relatively large deformation of the bicyclo[1.1.1]pentane cage is determined primarily by the electronegativity of X, similar to the electronegativity distortion of the benzene ring in Ph-X molecules. Transfer of pi electrons from substituent to cage or vice versa also plays a role in determining the cage deformation.

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