Abstract

The thermally allowed electrocyclic reaction syn-cyclophanediene (CPD) to dihydropyrene (DHP) was compared with the disallowed thermal electrocyclic reaction in anti CPD through density functional theory (DFT) calculations at the B3LYP/6-31 + G(d) level. Moreover, the results were also compared with the electrocyclization of 1,3,5 hexatriene to 1,3-cyclohexadiene . The Woodward-Hoffmann (W-H) allowed thermal reaction in syn CPD 11 has a calculated activation barrier of 6.23kcalmol(-1), compared with 29kcalmol(-1) for the electrocyclization of 1,3,5 hexatriene to 1,3-cyclohexadiene. The enhanced acceleration of electrocyclization is believed to arise from geometrically enforced spatially aligned termini of the hexatriene. Substituents at the electrocyclic terminus of cyclophanediene significantly affected (up to three fold) the activation barriers. Mono-substitution of CPD has substituent dependent acceleration or deceleration whereas di-substitution always increased the activation barrier. The activation barrier for electrocyclization in 33 is 4.44kcalmol(-1), which is the lowest activation barrier for any thermal electrocyclic reaction. Cyclophanedienes (CPDs) substituted with electron-rich substituents cyclized with high activation barriers and vice versa, a phenomenon significantly different from electrocyclic reaction of 1,3,5-hexatriene where no such trend is traceable. Comparison of W-H allowed and forbidden electrocyclization in syn and anti CPDs, respectively, revealed quite similar electronic demand, although the transition states are different in nature. The transition state for a W-H forbidden reaction is biradicaloid, with most of the spin density at the electrocyclic termini; however, the transition state for a W-H allowed reaction has no such contribution. We also believe that this is the first study of its type, where W-H allowed and forbidden reactions are compared on a similar set of molecules, and compared for electronic effect through substituents.

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