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Carbonyl- and Carboxyl-Substituted Enediynes: Synthesis, Computations, and Thermal Reactivity
The influence of electron-withdrawing groups (carbonyl and carboxyl) at the alkyne termini on the reactivity of enediynes was investigated by a combination of experimental and computational techniques. While the general chemical reactivity of such enediynes, especially if non-benzannelated, is incre...
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Published in: | Journal of organic chemistry 2001-03, Vol.66 (5), p.1742-1746 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The influence of electron-withdrawing groups (carbonyl and carboxyl) at the alkyne termini on the reactivity of enediynes was investigated by a combination of experimental and computational techniques. While the general chemical reactivity of such enediynes, especially if non-benzannelated, is increased markedly, the thermal cyclization, giving rise to Bergman cyclization products, is changed little relative to the parent enediyne system. This is evident from kinetic measurements and from density functional theory (DFT, BLYP/6-31G* + thermal corrections) computations of the experimental systems which show that the Bergman cyclization barriers slightly (3−4 kcal/mol) increase, in contrast to earlier theoretical predictions. The effect on the endothermicities is large (ΔΔH r = 7−12 kcal/mol). Hence, the increased reactivity of the substituted enediynes is entirely due to nucleophiles or radicals present in solution. This was demonstrated by quantitative experiments with diethylamine and tetramethyl piperidyl oxide (TEMPO) which both give fulvenes through 5-exo-dig cyclizations. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3263 1520-6904 |
DOI: | 10.1021/jo001417q |