Abstract

The cyclic voltammetry of benzene 1, naphthalene 2, biphenylene 3, and anthracene 4 fully annelated with bicyclo[2.2.2]octene showed that their cationic species have enhanced kinetic and thermodynamic stability as compared with the corresponding polymethyl analogues. Chemical one-electron oxidation of these neutral aromatic hydrocarbons led to facile isolation of their radical cation salts, which are persistent at ambient temperature even in air, and allowed X-ray crystallographic determination of their structures for the first time for the monomer radical cations of alkyl-substituted benzene, naphthalene, and biphenylene. The π-systems of these radical cations are planar except for that of the naphthalene radical cation 2•+. The structure of the benzene ring of 1•+ precludes the observation of a static Jahn−Teller distortion in the crystal at −100 °C. For the radical cations of 2−4, the geometrical changes in π-systems upon one-electron oxidation are consistent with what can be predicted from the orbital coefficients of the HOMO of the neutral molecules. Characteristic changes in the lengths of the σ-bonds of the bicyclic framework involved in σ−π conjugation (C−C hyperconjugation) were also observed. Theoretical calculations, using ab initio molecular orbital (HF/6-31G*) and density functional (B3LYP/6-31G*) methods, have been used to interpret the experimental data.

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