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Double Bonds? Studies on the Barrier to Rotation about the Cumulenic C=C Bonds of Tetraaryl[n]cumulenes (n=3, 5, 7, 9).

Martina U BühringerKevin PadbergMartin D PhlepsHarald MaidChristian PlachtChristian NeissMichael J FergusonAndreas GörlingRik R Tykwinski
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2018)
Bonding is a fundamental aspect of organic chemistry, yet the magnitude of C=C bonding in [n]cumulenes as a function of increasing chain length has yet to be experimentally verified for derivatives longer than n=5. The synthesis of a series of apolar and unsymmetrically substituted tetraaryl[n]cumulenes (n=3, 5, 7, 9) was developed and rotational barriers for Z/E isomerization were measured using dynamic VTNMR spectroscopy. Both experiment and theory confirm a dramatic reduction in the rotational barrier (through estimation of ΔG≠rot for the isomerization) across the series, from >24 to 19 to 15 to 11 kcal-1 in [n]cumulenes with n=3, 5, 7, 9, respectively. The reduction in cumulenic bonding in longer cumulenes thus affords bond rotational barriers that are more characteristic of a sterically hindered single bond than that of a double bond.
Keyphrases
  • transition metal
  • high resolution
  • molecular docking
  • single molecule
  • case control
  • mass spectrometry
  • drug discovery