Origins of the Regioselectivity of Cyclopropylcarbinyl Ring Opening Reactions.

Twenty years are acknowledged to be a long time in Internet/Web terms. In the early days (in 1994), it was a taken that the passage of 1 Web day in the Internet time-warp was ~≡ 7 for the rest of the world (the same factor as applied to the lives of canines). This temporal warping can also be said to apply to computational chemistry. I previously revisited some computational work done in 1992, and here I rediscover another investigation from that year[1] and that era. The aim in this post is to compare not only how the presentation of the results has changed, but how the computational models have as well.

Experiment had shown that Sabinene undergoes a radical ring-opening of the cyclopropane when treated with CCl3 radicals. If BrCCl3 is used as solvent, the kinetic 5-exo product is immediately trapped. If instead the reaction is conducted in the less reactive trap CCl4, the thermodynamic 6-endo product is isolated. The objective was to investigate the origins of these effects. In 1992, computational modelling was limited by the speed and memory of the computers to the following:

  1. Semi-empirical methods such as PM3 (ab initio methods were used only sparingly).
  2. Larger groups (in this case, the CCl3 and isopropyl groups) were trimmed off
  3. Simulations were often for the gas phase only (although the self-consistent-reaction-field was starting to be used to simulate solution).
  4. The properties of transition states were analysed via their molecular orbitals alone, and these were often disconcertingly complex:

The conclusion in 1992 using these techniques found that the transition state for 5-exo ring formation was 3.1 kcal/mol higher than for 6-endo, contrary to the experimental result. With no support from mere activation energies, perhaps slightly desperate recourse was made to an orbital correlation diagram, and the discussion included, inter alia, an arcane feature involving an avoided orbital crossing unique to the 5-exo transition state. Perhaps, in retrospect, rather too arcane for the intended audience, since this is unfortunately not a well cited article.

How might one do things differently (better?) twenty years on?

  1. Here, I start with presenting a (3D) model of each transition state. This was not done in 1992 for reasons of space (the journal format limited the page length very strictly) and of course the journal was only available in printed form (no e-journals then!).
  2. The model itself can be greatly improved (ωB97XD/6-311G(d,p)/CPCM=CCl4).  We now have a DFT calculation, including proper dispersion terms (which PM3 lacks by the way) and good triple-ζ basis set (PM3 is single-ζ), with inclusion of solvation (even though this is a radical, the dipole moments are nevertheless in the range 3-4D, and hence a gas phase model may not be entirely appropriate) and with no trimming off of groups. Crucially (in retrospect), my decision to delete the CCl3 group in 1992 was not a sound one! We have no archive from those days however, so cannot double-check this point. The modern calculation is indeed archived here (although of course whether this archive will itself still be available in 20 years time remains to be established!). 
  3. With modern computers, these new models took about 2.25 hours each to compute (the entire project was done in one working day). The 5-exo transition state is shown below:
  4. The presentation of this model can also be improved from that available 20 years ago. As usual, just click on the image above to see it.
  5. The free energy of activation, ΔG298 = 10.6 kcal/mol, is an entirely reasonable value for radical ring opening of a cyclopropyl (this value is mysteriously not reported in the 1992 version, for which I also take complete blame).
  6. The isomeric 6-endo transition state (which is observed to be kinetically slower) indeed now has the higher calculated barrier (ΔG298 = 11.5 kcal/mol) and this value corresponds to a process about 5 times slower than 5-exo. Recollect, PM3 obtained the opposite result, but possibly that was because the CCl3 group was not present in the model.
  7. We can learn a little about the dynamics of the reaction path; note how the isopropyl group rotates near the end of the ring-opening, due to some form of σ-conjugation no doubt.
  8. Instead of delocalised molecular orbitals, we are going to present localized NBOs, and in particular look at the localised effect to the C-CCl3 bond. The orbitals for the 5-exo transition state are shown first. The red-blue is the C-CCl3 σ* NBO orbital, the purple-orange is the highest energy doubly occupied NBO orbital (these two are selected because they represent a pair with a small energy gap, which means a larger interaction energy). Where blue and purple, or orange and red overlap, we have a stabilizing influence.
  9. The equivalent pair of NBOs for the 6-endo transition state overlaps much less well (click on image to get a rotatable 3D model to see for yourself). 
  10. Nevertheless, the 6-endo transition state manages an overlap between the highest singly occupied NBO and the C-Cl σ*, but because it involves only one, and not a pair of electrons, the stabilizing effect is smaller.
  11. What we conclude is that at the transition state, the 5-exo isomer has the more stabilizing orbital overlaps, but that beyond the transition state, the greater thermodynamic stability of the 6-endo isomer takes over.

Well, here we have a refresh of some chemistry analysed 20 years ago, and done with the help of software and hardware tools that have advanced considerably during this period. One may only speculate what another refresh in 20 years time might bring! 

References

  1. R.A. Batey, P. Grice, J.D. Harling, W.B. Motherwell, and H.S. Rzepa, "Origins of the regioselectivity of cyclopropylcarbinyl ring opening reactions in bicyclo [n.1.0] systems", Journal of the Chemical Society, Chemical Communications, pp. 942, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/C39920000942

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