Understanding the Origin of the Regioselectivity in Cyclopolymerizations of Diynes and How to Completely Switch It.
Hoimin JungKijung JungMannkyu HongSeongyeon KwonKunsoon KimSoon Hyeok HongTae-Lim ChoiMu-Hyun BaikPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2018)
Grubbs-type olefin metathesis catalysts are known to cyclopolymerize 1,6-heptadiynes to afford conjugated polyenes containing five- or six-membered carbocycles. Although high levels of regioselectivity up to >99:1 were observed previously for the formation of five-membered rings, it was neither possible to deliberately obtain six-membered rings at similar levels of selectivity nor understood why certain catalysts showed this selectively. Combining experimental and computational methods, a novel and general theory for what controls the regiochemistry of these cyclopolymerizations is presented. The electronic demands of the ruthenium-based Fischer carbenes are found to innately prefer to form five-membered rings. Reducing the electrophilicity of the carbene by enforcing a trigonal-bipyramidal structure for the ruthenium, where stronger π-backdonation increases the electron density on the carbene, is predicted to invert the regioselectivity. Subsequent experiments provide strong support for the new concept, and it is possible to completely switch the regioselectivity to a ratio of <1:99.