Abstract

Magnetic shielding studies demonstrate that successive hydrogenation of NiII norcorrole (NiNc), a stable molecule combining aromatic and antiaromatic features, first weakens and then eliminates the central antiaromatic region, even though the NiNc antiaromatic "core", a 14-membered conjugated cycle with 16 π electrons, is formally preserved throughout the H2 NiNc-H8 NiNc series. The differences between aromatic and non-aromatic isotropic shielding distributions and nucleus-independent chemical shift (NICS) values in these hydrogenated porphyrin analogues are highlighted by comparing the results for the members of the H2 NiNc-H8 NiNc series to those for the aromatic NiII porphyrin complex. The results strongly support the unexpected and counterintuitive conclusion that H8 NiNc will be nonaromatic, without even a trace of antiaromaticity. Based on these findings, H8 NiNc is predicted to be the most stable member of the H2 NiNc-H8 NiNc series.

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