Abstract

Perimeter and ring currents induced in planar monocycles and polycycles by perpendicular magnetic fields are commonly taken as diagnostic of aromaticity and antiaromaticity in these systems. Diatropic π currents are associated with aromaticity, paratropic with its opposite. The ipsocentric method is an accurate and economical way of calculating ab initio current-density maps. In π systems it provides a natural interpretation of ring currents in terms of nonredundant orbital contributions, governed by simple symmetry rules for π–π* virtual excitations and dominated by the frontier electrons. Thus, in planar [4n + 2] monocycles, the product of π HOMO and π* LUMO symmetries includes that of the in-plane translations and leads to a 4-electron diatropic current. In planar [4n] monocycles, this product includes the symmetry of the in-plane rotation and leads to a 2-electron paratropic current. Perturbation arguments based on the monocycle explain the opposite senses of the π ring currents in naphthalene (diatropic) and pentalene (paratropic) as consequences of their different frontier-orbital symmetry products. In a generalization to heterocycles, ring current maps for benzotriazole (BtH), its conjugate base (Bt−) and the cation (Bt+) are calculated at an ab initio level. The diatropic current of the two 10π systems and the paratropic current of the 8π system are rationalized in terms of the perturbed-annulene orbital model, giving an explanation of the applicability of simple electron counting in these cases: where the frontier-orbital structure remains close to that of the [4n+ 2]/[4n] annulene, so does the current-density map.

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