Posts Tagged ‘Andrew White’

Spotting the unexpected. Anomeric effects involving alkenes?

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

How one might go about answering the question: do alkenes promote anomeric effects? A search of chemical abstracts does not appear to cite any examples (I may have missed them of course, since it depends very much on the terminology you use, and new effects may not yet have any agreed terminology) and a recent excellent review of hyperconjugation does not mention it. Here I show how one might provide an answer.

First, what is an anomeric effect? The diagram below shows the classic anomeric effect in which a donor (an oxygen lone pair) interacts with an acceptor (a C-O bond). The orientation around the single bond shown with a green arrow is crucial; the effect only happens when the donating lone pair is aligned antiperiplanar to the accepting C-O bond, at which point the lengthening of the C-O bond should be maximal (shown as a dashed line below). The blue analogue is the corresponding effect using an alkene as the donor, but retaining the C-O bond as the acceptor.

I had previously addressed this theme by discussing the molecule below. Switching the acceptor from a C-O to a C-cyano bond has the effect of inducing an axial orientation for both cyano groups, a “cyanomeric” effect! Whilst the stronger is undoubtedly the one shown in red, note the blue interaction, that involves an alkene rather than oxygen as donor.

One way of providing evidence is a crystallographic search. Here I am using Conquest, the program provided by the Cambridge crystallographic data centre, with the following specification (thanks to Andrew White for helping me frame this search!).

The search query

  1. The length of the C-O bond (blue arrow) is defined as a search parameter
  2. The absolute value of the torsion around the bond (red arrow) is also so defined
  3. I have restricted the acceptor to C-O bonds (this of course excludes C-CN).
  4. The C-O acceptor can be enhanced by bearing an electron withdrawing group, which can be e.g. carbonyl, phosphate, sulfate, perchlorate etc.
  5. The alkene donor can be enhanced with donating groups such as oxygen, nitrogen or carbon
  6. NOT Booleans are applied to restrict the substituents the alkene can carry  to only sp3 carbons (or H) by excluding sp2 or sp hybridised carbons. This is to prevent the substituents from delocalizing the alkene (in effect preventing competition from these substituents), but allowing them to stabilise any induced carbocation resonance by hyperconjugation.
  7. The C of the C-O is specified as acyclic (to allow the torsion to in theory have any allowed value).
  8. The search is also restricted to structures with no disorder or other errors, and an R factor of < 0.075.
These specifications can be seen in the first hit obtained:

A hit

A total of 215 structures are found, and a scatterplot of the C-O bond length version the (abs)C=C-C-O torsion is shown below.

Scatterplot. Click to view a larger version.

There are two main clusters of hits, those with torsions close to zero, and those with torsions between ~90-120°. The latter cluster is very clearly shifted to the right of the former, indicating that on average these C-O bond lengths are longer. The red-orange-light green hits (1.46-1.50Å range) are to be found exclusively in the “antiperiplanar” cluster. One might conclude that statistically, the π-anomeric effect appears real. Of course, there may be many other reasons why the C-O bond is lengthened, and each of the molecules above should be individually inspected to exclude these.

This sort of structural search takes only minutes (if you know how to formulate it) and I would certainly encourage you to try it out on your own favourite effect!  See if the excellent  and open CrystalEye resource gives a similar answer (the Conquest /CCDC system is commercial, and not open).


H. S. Rzepa, 2011-11-02. URL:http://www.ch.imperial.ac.uk/rzepa/blog/?p=5368. Accessed: 2011-11-02. (Archived by WebCite® at http://www.webcitation.org/62tOSgnzK)

A historical detective story: 120 year old crystals

Wednesday, November 17th, 2010

In 1890, chemists had to work hard to find out what the structures of their molecules were, given they had no access to the plethora of modern techniques we are used to in 2010. For example, how could they be sure what the structure of naphthalene was? Well, two such chemists, William Henry Armstrong (1847-1937) and his student William Palmer Wynne (1861-1950; I might note that despite working with toxic chemicals for years, both made it to the ripe old age of ~90!) set out on an epic 11-year journey to synthesize all possible mono, di, tri and tetra-substituted naphthalenes. Tabulating how many isomers they could make (we will call them AW here) would establish beyond doubt the basic connectivity of the naphthalene ring system. This was in fact very important, since many industrial dyes were based on this ring system, and patents depended on getting it correct! Amazingly, their collection of naphthalenes survives to this day. With the passage of 120 years, we can go back and check their assignments. The catalogued collection (located at Imperial College) comprises 263 specimens. Here the focus is on just one, specimen number number 22, which bears an original label of trichloronaphthalene [2:3:1] and for which was claimed a melting point of 109.5°C. What caught our attention is that a search for this compound in modern databases (Reaxys if you are interested, what used to be called Beilstein) reveals the compound to have a melting point of ~84°C. So, are alarm bells ringing? Did AW make a big error? Were many of the patented dyes not what they seemed?

1,2,3-trichloronaphthalene

The story starts to get murky when Reaxys reports the earliest literature for this compound as being 1941 (DOI: 10.1039/JR9410000243), the authority being Wynne himself (now a sprightly 80). The collection of 263 specimens was thought to go back to the 1890s, so how could it contain a compound only made about 50 years later? Time to do an X-ray determination. Remarkably, the 120 year old crystals of specimen 22 were still in good shape, but the determined structure held an initial surprise. The compound was in fact 1,6,7-trichloronaphthalene, quite a different species from the label.

1,6,7-trichloronaphthalene

So, did AW get things badly wrong, and were all those patents based on these structures potentially invalid? A little more detective work using Reaxys reveals that the 1,6,7 isomer melts at 109.5°C, the same as reported by AW in 1890 (Chem. News J. Ind. Sci., 1890 , 61, p. 273). So how did the 1,6,7-compound come to be mistaken for a 1,2,3,-isomer? The culprit turns out to be one prime (‘).

1,6,7 = 2:3:1' Click for 3D

Updated (see comment) Click for 3D

The numbering system in 1890 was different from what it is now. Then, primes were used to distinguish the numbering on each ring. When the collection was catalogued (in the 1990s), the 1′ was mistaken for 1 (you can see the prime on the original label). AW were correct all along, and the patent owners for all those naphthalene dyes can rest easy.

Sample 22 from AW collection

What this teaches us is that crystallography on 120 year old organic compounds is perfectly viable. Indeed, can anyone else claim to have solved the structure of such an old compound? And that those old chemists knew what they were doing, despite not having any instrumentation to help them. Oh, and a final comment. Precious few collections of molecules made by the original scientists exist nowadays. Many a collection has literally been skipped because of health and safety concerns. The AW collection itself was rescued from oblivion by the narrowest of margins. And we have permanently lost the opportunity for any detective work of the type described above. You can see that I am very upset by this. Heritage conservation should not just be old buildings, paintings etc, but the chemical heritage collections as well.

Thanks to Andrew White for the crystal structures (of this and three other samples, but their stories are for another day).