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STEREOCHEMISTRY Stereochemistry deals with the spatial arrangements of atoms or groups in a molecule. Isomers having the same structure but differ in the spatial arrangements are called stereoisomers (i.e., stereoisomers have different configurations) and the phenomenon is called stereoisomerism. Stereoisomerism can be divided into two classes, optical isomerism and geometrical isomerism. Optical isomers because of their molecular asymmetry rotate plane of polarization of plane polarized light. Optical isomers which rotate plane polarized light in equal and opposite amounts are called enantiomers. Enantiomers have similar physical and chemical properties. Geometrical isomers do not rotate plane polarized light because of their molecular symmetry. Geometrical isomers have different physical and chemical properties. Geometrical isomerism is also known as cis-trans isomerism. Optical Isomerism All optically active structures have non-superimposable mirror images. Such structures may be asymmetric or dissymmetric. Asymmetric structures have no elements of symmetry. Dissymmetric structures possess some elements of symmetry, but they are capable of existing in two forms which are not superimposable. Optical activity may be due to crystalline or molecular structure. Quartz, sodium chlorate etc are optically active due to crystalline structure. They are optically active only in the solid state. Such compounds exist in two crystal forms which are mirror images and rotate the plane polarized light in opposite directions. Such crystals are called enantiomorphous. Molecular Chirality A molecule which is not superimposable on its mirror image is a chiral molecule. If two stereoisomers are nonsuperimposable mirror images the molecules are enantiomers. Samples containing only one enantiomer are called enatiomerically pure. Stereoisomers which are not enantiomers are called diastereoisomers (or diastereomers). In most of the chiral compounds chirality is due to the presence of chiral centres. Carbon atoms with four different groups attached to it are called chiral carbon atoms or asymmetric carbon atoms. An asymmetric carbon atom does not possess any symmetry elements. For a compound to be optically active it need not be asymmetric. But the molecule should not possess plane of symmetry, centre of symmetry and alternating axis of symmetry in order to show optical isomerism. Chiral compounds may or may not possess proper axis of symmetry. Only compounds belonging to Cn and Dn point groups show optical activity. (B) (A) 1 Compound (A) possesses a centre of symmetry and hence optically inactive. Compound (B) is also optically inactive due to the presence of an alternating axis of symmetry. Stereochemical Nomenclature D and L Nomenclature Fischer proposed that stereochemical relationships are more important than actual direction of rotation. He pointed out that the symbols d and l should refer to stereochemical relationships rather than to the direction of rotation of the compound. He selected d-glucose as the standard. Natural glucose is dextrorotatory (d-glucose). Therefore all derivatives of d-glucose were considered to be belonging to d-series. Later it was found that d-glyceraldehyde is stereochemically related to d-glucose. Therefore glyceraldehyde was selected as the standard for stereochemical correlation. The symbols d and l have been replaced by D and L for stereochemical relationships. D(+)glyceraldehyde is drawn with hydrogen atom at the left, hydroxyl group at the right and the aldehyde group at the top corner by convention. Any compound which can be prepared from or converted to D(+)-glyceraldehyde belongs to the D-series and any compound which can be prepared from or converted to L(-)-glyceraldehyde belongs to the L-series. CHO CHO HO H H OH CH2OH CH2OH L(-)-glyceraldehyde H HO OH H CH2OH CH2OH L-series D-series R and S Nomenclature (The Cahn-Ingold-Prelog System) In Cahn–Ingold–Prelog system, the four groups on an asymmetric carbon are ranked according to a set of sequence rules. The important postulates of the sequence rule are given below. 1. Substituents are listed in order of decreasing atomic number of the atom directly joined to the carbon. 2. Where two or more of the atoms connected to the asymmetric carbon are the same, the atomic number of the second atom determines the order. For example, in the molecule Me2CH-CHBr-CH2OH, the CH2OH group takes precedence over the Me2CH group because oxygen has a higher atomic number than carbon. Note that this is so although there are two carbons in Me2CH and only one oxygen in CH2OH. If two or more atoms connected to the second atom are the same, the third atom determines the precedence, and so on. 2 3. A tritium atom takes precedence over deuterium, which in turn takes precedence over ordinary hydrogen. Similarly, any higher isotope (e.g., 14C) takes precedence over any lower one. 4. If double and triple bonds are present then both atoms attached to the multiple bond are considered to be duplicated (for a double bond) or triplicated (for a triple bond). 5. Ring systems are treated as branched chains and if double bond is present then the atoms connected by the double bond are considered to be duplicated. Once the order is determined, the molecule is held so that the lowest group in the sequence is pointed away from the viewer. Then if the other groups, in the order listed, are oriented clockwise, the molecule is designated (R), and if counterclockwise, (S). Molecules with Chiral Axes Axial chirality is the chirality resulting from the nonplanar arrangement of four groups about an axis. The axis is called a chiral axis. Suitably substituted allenes, biphenyls, alkylidenecycloalkanes and spiranes can possess chiral axis. Some examples for molecules possessing chiral axes are given below. R-(+)-2,2’-Diamino-6,6’ -dimethylbiphenyl In all the above compounds chirality is due to the unsymmetrical distribution of four groups about an axis. All four groups may not be different from one another, but there should not be a plane of symmetry present in the molecule. 3 In allenes, the central carbon is sp hybridized. The remaining two p orbitals are perpendicular to each other and each p orbital overlaps with the p orbital of one adjacent carbon atom. Thus the two groups at one end of the allene lie in plane perpendicular to the plane containing the two groups at the other end. Allenes are chiral only if both sides are unsymmetrically substituted. Possesses plane of symmetry Possesses plane of symmetry No plane of symmetry In simple alkenes the four groups lie in one plane and such compounds show cis-trans isomerism. Similarly if there are odd numbers of cumulative double bonds, then the four groups at the ends lie in one plane and such compounds show cis-trans isomerism. But if there are even numbers of cumulative double bonds, the groups at the two ends will be in perpendicular planes and in such cases optical activity is possible. Similarly spiranes and compounds with exocyclic double bonds can also show optical activity because of the presence of chiral axes. Atropisomerism Atropisomers are stereoisomers resulting from restricted rotation about single bonds. In such cases the rotational barrier is high enough for the isolation of isomers. Certain substituted biphenyls can show atropisomerism. If three of the four ortho positions in biphenyls are substituted by groups which are large enough to prevent rotation of the rings about C-C bond, then such compounds can be resolved. In order to show atropisomerism, both rings should be asymmetrically substituted. In the above compound, ring A is asymmetrically substituted. But ring B is symmetrically substituted and the compound has a plane of symmetry. Therefore the compound is optically inactive. But in the following compound both rings are asymmetrically substituted and hence no plane of symmetry. The compound can be resolved. 4 In some cases two groups in ortho positions are sufficient for hindered rotation. For example For example biphenyl,2,2’-bis-sulfonic acid shows atropisomerism. SO3H SO3H 1,1’-binapthyl also shows optical activity, since at room temperature rotation about c-c bond is prevented. In this case racemisation takes place due to rotation about 1,1’-bond. But this rotation is resisted due to the van der Waals interaction between the hydrogens. Specification of Absolute Configuration of biphenyls Asymmetry of biphenyls is not due to the presence of chiral carbon atoms, the asymmetry is due to the presence of chiral axis. Absolute configuration of biphenyls can be assigned by assuming that the chiral axis is derived from a chiral centre (Z). X B A D C Y The molecule can be viewed from any of he two ends of the chiral axis XY. If the molecule is viewed from one end of the axis the groups near that end will get precedence over the groups at the other end. Thus if viewed from the end X, the groups A and B precede groups C and D. Accordingly the groups are arranged in the priority order. 5 Priority of A and B (and C and D) is determined by the normal sequence rule. The molecule is viewed from the side remote from the least priority group and R and S notations are assigned as usual. Some examples are given below. (i) X 2 Cl 1 NO2 2 HO2C O2N 3 1 = CO2H 4 3 Br 4 (S)-configuration Y In this example the molecule is viewed from X. The same result will be obtained if it is viewed from Y. In that case groups 3 and 4 will become 1 and 2. (ii) NH2 1 NH2 2 3 = two interchanges = 3 4 CH3 4 CH3 1 2 (R)-configuration Absolute configurations of compounds other than biphenyls which possess chiral axis can also be assigned similarly. 1 1 3 H3C C H C CH3 C = two interchanges = H 4 2 4 2 3 (R)-configuration Molecules with Chiral Planes A chiral plane is a planar unit of a molecule connected to an adjacent part of the structure through bonds those result in restricted torsion, so that the plane cannot lie in a symmetry plane. Trans-cyclooctene, monosubstituted paracyclophanes etc. are examples. Cyclophanes can be resolved if a substituent is present which can restrict the rotation of the aromatic ring about the larger ring. In the following example (A), the compound can be resolved if n=10 and X=Br. 6 O CO2H CO2H H2 C H2C (CH2)n (CH2)n X C H2 O X B A CH2 C In compound B, if n=10, then, the compound is resolvable. Mono substituted [2.2]paracyclophane, C can also be resolved. In all these examples optical activity is due to the hindered rotation of the benzene ring and hence all these are cases of atropisomerism. In trans-cyclooctene chiral plane includes the double bond carbon atoms and the four atoms attached to the double bond. Racemisation The process of converting an optically active compound into the racemic modification is known as racemisation. Most optically active compounds undergo racemisation under the influence of light, heat or chemical reagents. Ease of racemisation and the agent required depends on the nature of the compound. Some compounds racemise so rapidly that they cannot be isolated in optically active form. Some compounds can be isolated in optically active form but racemise spontaneously. Most of the compounds can be racemised by using different reagents. A few compounds cannot be racemised at all. Mechanism of racemisation depends on the type of compound undergoing racemisation. Racemisation of (-)-lactic acid in aq.NaOH takes place through keto-enol tautomerism. _ OH O H3C H O - OH -H+ H3C O HO O C _ O - H3C C H+ _ O H O H3C OH O - (+) (-) Resolution Resolution is the process of separation of a racemic modification into its enantiomers. Resolution procedures may not give complete resolution. There are several methods for resolution. 1. Conversion to Diastereomers. This is the best of all methods of resolution. If the racemic mixture to be resolved contains a carboxyl group it is possible to form a salt with 7 an optically active base. Since the base used is, say, the (S) form, there will be a mixture of two salts produced having the configurations (SS) and (RS). Although the acids are enantiomers, the salts are diastereomers and have different properties. The property most often used for separation is differential solubility. Naturally occurring optically active bases are generally used for the resolution of acids. Among the most commonly used are brucine, ephedrine, strychnine, and morphine. Once the two diastereomers have been separated, it is easy to convert the salts back to the free acids and the recovered base can be used again. Racemic bases can be converted to diastereomeric salts with active acids. Tartaric acid, camphor-β-sulphonic acid etc are mainly used for this purpose. Alcohols can be converted to diastereomeric esters and aldehydes to diastereomeric hydrazones. 2. Differential Absorption. When a racemic mixture is placed on a chromatographic column and if the column consists of chiral substances, then the enantiomers should move along the column at different rates. Separation has been successfully accomplished with paper, column, thin-layer and gas and liquid chromatography. For example, racemic mandelic acid has been almost completely resolved by column chromatography on starch. 3. Chiral Recognition. In some cases it is possible for a host to form an inclusion compound with one enantiomer of a racemic guest, but not the other. This is called chiral recognition. One enantiomer fits into the chiral host cavity, the other does not. More often, both diastereomers are formed, but one forms more rapidly than the other, so that if the guest is removed it is already partially resolved. 4. Biochemical Processes. Certain bacteria and moulds can destroy one enantiomer of certain racemic modification more rapidly than the other. For example, Pencillium Glaucum, a mould, when grown in a solution of racemic ammonium tartrate, attacks the (+)-form and leaves the (-)-form. This method has certain disadvantages. Dilute solutions should be used and hence the amount obtained will be low. One form is always destroyed and the other form is also partially destroyed. 5. Mechanical Separation. This method is applicable only if the enantiomers crystallize separately. Since the appearances of the two types of crystals are different, they can be separated. Pasteur separated (+) and (-) isomers of sodium ammonium tartrate in this manner. This method is limited to a few compounds. 6. Kinetic Resolution. Since enantiomers react with chiral compounds at different rates, it is sometimes possible to effect a partial separation by stopping the reaction before completion. For example (-)-menthol reacts more slowly with (-) mandelic acid than with (+)-mandelic acid. If insufficient (-)-menthol is used for the esterification of racemic mandelic acid, the ester will contain more (+)-mandelate than (-) mandelate. The unreacted acid will contain more (-)-mandelic acid than (+)-mandelic acid. Thus partial resolution of mandelic acid can be achieved. 7. Deracemization. In this type of process, one enantiomer is converted to the other, so that a racemic mixture is converted to a pure enantiomer, or to a mixture enriched in one enantiomer. For this method an outside optically active substance is required. To effect the deracemization two conditions are necessary: (1) the enantiomers must complex 8 differently with the optically active substance; (2) they must interconvert under the conditions of the experiment. When racemic thioesters were placed in solution with a specific optically active amide for 28 days, the solution contained 89% of one enantiomer and 11% of the other. Stereotopicity Consider the bromination of propanoic acid to form 2-bromopropanoic acid. Br2/P CH3CH2CO2H CH3CHBrCO2H The two hydrogen atoms in propanoic acid appear alike. But in this case the two hydrogens differ in their behaviour towards the reagent. In this reaction the bromine atom can replace any of the two hydrogen atoms. The two replacements do not produce the same molecule. Instead, replacement of one hydrogen gives one enantiomer and replacement of the second hydrogen gives the other enantiomer. The two enantiomers are formed in equal amounts. The two hydrogen atoms in propanoic acid are called enatiotopic hydrogens. Two atoms or groups in a molecule are enantiotopic if replacement of each in turn by some other group lead to a pair of enantiomers. Hydrogen atoms in propanoic acid are enantiotopic by internal comparison (they are in the same molecule). Corresponding groups in a pair of enantiomers are enantiotopic by external comparison (since they are in two different molecules). If separate replacements give the same molecule the groups are called homotopic. Consider the bromination of 3-chlorobutanoic acid. CO2H CO2H CO2H Br2/P Br2/P H Br H H Br H H Cl CH3 H Cl CH3 H Cl CH3 In this case the two products are not same, they are not enantiomers either. The products are diastereomers and they are formed in unequal amounts. The two α-hydrogen atoms in 3-chlorobutanoic acid are called diastereotopic. Two atoms or groups in a molecule are diastereotopic if replacement of each in turn by some other group leads to a pair of diastereomers. Prochirality If a centre in a molecule bears enantiotopic groups that center is called prochiral centre. The α-carbon atom in propanoic acid is a prochiral centre. The two enantiotopic hydrogen atoms in propanoic acid can be designated as pro-S or pro-R hydrogens depending on whether the replacement of the hydrogen with deuterium gives R or S isomer. CO2H CO2H CH3 H2 H1 H2 = D HO2C D two interchanges CH3 CH3 H2 (R)9 Thus H1 is pro-R and H2 is pro-S. Prochiral centres on treatment with achiral reagents gives enantiomers in equal amounts. But on treatment with chiral reagents enantiomers are formed in unequal amounts. Faces of double bonds can also be called enantiotopic or prochiral if enantiomers are produced by addition reactions. The two faces of acetaldehyde are enatiotopic. Attack of phenyl magnesium bromide from one side gives one enantiomer while attack from the other side gives the second enantiomer. OH CH3 H Ph PhMgBr + H CH3 C H CH 3 Ph OH O Prochiral faces of double bonds can be designated as si or re according to whether the three groups makes a right handed pattern (re-face) or left handed pattern (si-face) H H3C CH3 H C C O O si-face re-face This rule can be applied to ethylenic double bonds also. Each end of the double bond should be treated separately. HO2C CO2H H H C C C C H CO H H HO C 2 2 re-si si-re maleic acid H HO2C CO2H C C C C CO2H H H HO2C H si-si re-re fumaric acid Enantiomeric Excess Enantiomeric excess (ee) is the percent excess of an enantiomer over the racemate in a mixture of the enantiomer and racemate. RS ee = 100 = %R or %S RS 10 In this equation, R and S represent the quantity of the isomers R and S and R+S is the total quantity. The term enantiomeric excess is widely applied in enantiselective reactions in order to give the enatiomeric purity of the product. Non Carbon Chiral Centres Any molecule containing an atom that has four bonds pointing to the corners of a tetrahedron will be optically active if the four groups are different. Among atoms in this category are Si, Ge, Sn and N (in quaternary salts or N-oxides). In sulfones, the sulfur bonds with a tetrahedral array, but since two of the groups are always oxygen, no chirality normally results. However, if one oxygen is 16O and the other 18O then the sulfone can be optically active Optically active chiral phosphates in which two isotopes of oxygen are present have also been made. Atoms with pyramidal bonding might be expected to give rise to optical activity if the atom is connected to three different groups, since the unshared pair of electrons is analogous to a fourth group. For example, a secondary or tertiary amine where X, Y, and Z are different would be expected to be chiral and thus resolvable. Many attempts have been made to resolve such compounds, but until 1968 all of them failed because of pyramidal inversion, which is a rapid oscillation of the unshared pair from one side of the XYZ plane to the other, thus converting the molecule into its enantiomer.For ammonia, there are 2 X1011 inversions every second. The inversion is less rapid in substituted ammonia derivatives (amines, amides, etc.). Two types of nitrogen atom invert particularly slowly, namely, a nitrogen atom in a three-membered ring and a nitrogen atom connected to another atom bearing an unshared pair. Even in such compounds pyramidal inversion is rapid. Optically active compounds could be prepared only when both features were combined. For example the enantiomers of 1-chloro-2-methylaziridine were separated. In molecules in which the nitrogen atom is at a bridgehead, pyramidal inversion is course prevented. Such molecules, if chiral, can be resolved. For example, Troger’s base is optically active. 11 Phosphorus inverts more slowly and arsenic still more slowly. Nonbridgehead phosphorus, arsenic, and antimony compounds have also been resolved. Sulfur exhibits pyramidal bonding in sulfoxides, sulfinic esters, sulfonium salts, and sulfites. Many optically active compounds of these types are known. The Cause of Optical Activity The reason why a chiral molecule rotates the plane of plane polarized light is explained below. Whenever any light hits any molecule in a transparent material, the light is slowed because of interaction with the molecule. This is responsible for the refraction of light and the decrease in velocity is proportional to the refractive index of the material. The extent of interaction depends on the polarizability of the molecule. Plane-polarized light may be regarded as being made up of two kinds of circularly polarized light. Circularly polarized light has the appearance of a helix propagating around the axis of light motion, and one kind is a left- and the other is a right-handed helix. As long as the plane-polarized light is passing through a symmetrical region, the two circularly polarized components travel at the same speed. However, a chiral molecule has a different polarizability depending on whether it is approached from the left or the right. One circularly polarized component on approaching the molecule sees a different polarizability (hence a different refractive index) than the other and is slowed to a different extent. This would seem to mean that the left- and right-handed circularly polarized components travel at different velocities, since each has been slowed to a different extent. However, it is not possible for two components of the same light to be traveling at different velocities. Actually the faster component ‘‘pulls’’ the other towards it, resulting in rotation of the plane. In liquids and gases, the molecules are randomly oriented. An optically inactive molecule which has a plane of symmetry will show no optical rotation when the plane of the polarized light coincides with the plane of symmetry. But all other orientations rotate the plane, even though the molecules are achiral. There is no net rotation because, there will always be another molecule later on in the path of the light that is oriented exactly opposite and will rotate the plane back again. Even although nearly all molecules rotate the plane individually, the total rotation is zero. For chiral molecules, however (if there is no racemic mixture), no opposite orientation is present and there is a net rotation. 12 Dependence of Rotation on Conditions of Measurement The amount of rotation α is not a constant for a given enantiomer; it depends on the length of the sample vessel, the temperature, the solvent and concentration (for solutions), the pressure (for gases), and the wavelength of light. The length of the vessel and the concentration or pressure determine the number of molecules in the path of the beam and a is linear with this. Therefore, a number is defined, called the specific rotation [α], which is where α is the observed rotation, l is the cell length in decimeters, c is the concentration in grams per milliliter, and d is the density in the same units. The specific rotation is 25 usually given along with the temperature and wavelength, in this manner: [α] 546 . The expression [α]D means that the rotation was measured with sodium D light; that is, λ = 589 nm. The molar rotation [M] t is the specific rotation times the molecular weight divided by 100. Chiroptical Properties Chiroptical properties are properties of chiral compounds which arise as a result of their non-destructive interaction with anisotropic radiation (polarized light). These properties can differentiate the two enantiomers of a chiral compound. Optical activity, optical rotatory dispersion (ORD), circular dichroism (CD) etc. are examples for chiroptical properties. Optical Rotatory Dispersion (ORD) The measurement of optical rotation as a function of wavelength is called optical rotatory dispersion. ORD measurements are valuable only for chiral compounds. ORD arises because of the different refractive indices of the left and right circularly polarized light in a chiral compound. The value of specific rotation increases as the wavelength decreases. In order to get valuable information optical rotation should be measured around the region of absorption band. The most widely studied compounds are those containing carbonyl chromophores. There are three types of ORD curves, plane curves, single cotton effect curves and multiple cotton effect curves. Plane Curves: They are smooth curves; they do not contain maximum and minimum. Plane curves do not cross the zero rotation line. They are either positive or negative. 13 Single Cotton Effect Curves: Cotton effect (C.E.) is the manifestation of the refraction in ORD or the absorption in CD in the vicinity of UV-visible absorption band. In ORD a peak followed by a null followed by a trough or the reverse represents a cotton effect curve. If peak occurs in the longer wave length region the curve is positive and if the trough occurs in the longer wave length region the curve is negative. The vertical distance between the peak and trough is called the amplitude and the horizontal distance is called the breadth of the C.E. curve. C.E. curves of enantiomers are mirror images of each other. In order t o show cotton effect the chromophore should be chiral or it should be in a chiral environment. Multiple Cotton effect Curves: These are complicated curves resulting from electronic transitions of several chromophores. Circular Dichroism Chiral substance show differential absorption of circularly polarized lights. This is called circular dichroism. Circular dichroism arises because the molar absorptivities of 14 left and right circularly polarized light (εL and εR) are different for a chiral compound. If εL > εR,,then CD is said to be positive and if εL < εR CD is negative. For a given compound ORD and CD curves have the same sign. CD curve is also a cotton effect curve. CD spectra are simpler to interpret compared to ORD. In CD spectra bands are well separated and the comparison with electronic absorption band is easier compared to ORD. In many cases ORD curves are masked by back ground effects. This is not a problem with CD. Therefore CD is preferred over ORD in many cases. However ORD can be observed over entire wave length range whereas CD is observable only near an electronic absorption. Applications of ORD and CD Plane ORD curves are useful for determining whether a sample is optically active or racemic. Normal optical rotation is usually measured at longer wave length and hence undetectable in many cases. If a sample shows zero rotation over a wave length range it will be surely racemic. Cotton effect curves (CD and ORD) can be used for locating the position of absorption. It can also be used for determining the position of a functional group in a molecule. Cotton effect curves can be used to determine the configurations of compounds. ORD and CD curves of a sample can be compared with those of known compounds to determine the configuration. Since cotton effect curves are affected by conformational changes, it can be used for determining the conformer population of a chiral compound. Cotton effect curves can give important information about the secondary structures of polypeptides, proteins and nucleotides. It is to be noted that any two of the three structural components, constitution, configuration and conformation should be known in order to assign the third from ORD or CD. Also in order to predict ORD or CD all the three structural components should be known. 15 Axial Haloketone Rule Axial haloketone rule is a generalization established as a result of the ORD studies of cyclohexanone derivatives. ORD studies have shown that equatorial α-halogen substituents have little effect on ORD curves. However axial α-halogen atoms cause bathochromic shift increases the amplitude of ORD and may invert the sign of CE. The axial haloketone rule can be stated as follows. When a halogen atom is introduced in the α-equatorial position of a cyclohexanone then there will be no change in the sign of ORD curve. But if halogen atom is introduced in the α-axial position, the sign may be affected. The sign of the curve may be predicted by viewing the α-halogenocyclohexanone along the O=C bond as shown below. If the halogen is on the left of the observer, there will be a negative curve and if it is on the right, there will be positive curve. O O X +CE X O X O -CE X An application of the rule is given below. Chlorination of (R)-(+)-3methylcyclohexanone gives 2-chloro-5-methyl derivative which shows a negative CE in octane. The constitution of the product and the axial position of the halogen have been established. The negative CE shows that the compound has a trans arrangement. But in methanol a positive CE is observed. In polar methanol the diaxial conformer changes to the diequatorial conformer which has higher dipole moment. The cis isomer should show only +ve CE. 16 O CH3 Cl CH3 O Cl -CE in octane O CH3 +CE in methanol trans O CH3 O Cl CH3 Cl +CE cis +CE Octant Rule Octant rule relates the sign of the ORD curve with the configuration or conformation of a keto steroid. The rule is applied as follows. The region of the keto group is divided into eight octants by three mutually perpendicular planes. The C=O double bond is made the x-axis with the origin at the mid-point of the bond. The y-and zaxes are also drawn along the origin. The observer views the molecule along the x-axis from the positive side. The planes xy, xz and yz divide the region of the keto group into eight octants. So there are four back octants and four front octants. The sign of octant is the sign of the product of the coordinates x, y and z. Signs of the back octants are shown below. 17 upper right upper left _ + lower right lower left _ + Signs of back octants According to octant rule atoms lying in the back upper left and back lower right octants make positive contributions to ORD while atoms in back lower left and back upper right make negative contributions. Atoms lying in any of the three planes make no contributions. Hydrogen atoms are generally ignored. Equatorial substituents on α-carbon atoms (carbon atoms 2 and 6) make no contributions because they lie in the xy-plane. Carbon-4 lies in the xz-plane and carbon-2 and carbon-6 lie in the xy plane. So contributions from these atoms are zero. Generally contributions of C3 and C5 cancel one another. Substituents on C4 also lie in xz-plane and do not make any contribution. Therefore only axial substituents on C2 and C6 and substituents on C3 and C5 make contributions to the sign of ORD. The contribution of an atom to the sign of the ORD curve is the sign of the products of its co-ordinates. The projection of cyclohexanone with equatorial and axial substituents is given below. a a e 5 e 3 e 2 a e 4 6 e 1 a a Fluorine shows opposite behaviour, because fluorine has the lowest atomic refraction. (+)-3-methylcyclohaxanone shows a positive CE. In this molecule contribution to the sign of ORD is only from the methyl group. Since the configuration is R, octant rule predicts equatorial conformation and this is actually the case. 18 3 4 3 5 4 6 2 5 6 1 2 1 Axial ORD should be negative Equatorial ORD should be positive Conformations of R(+)-3-methylcyclohexanone. The actual conformation should be equatorial since the observed ORD is positive. Thus if we know the sign of the ORD curve, the conformation can be elucidated. Since the equatorial conformation is the preferred one in most of the cases, octant rule can be used for predicting the sign of ORD. Octant rule is qualitative. It is based on the assumption that contributions of atom are same irrespective of their positions with respect to the keto group. In some cases these assumptions do not apply. In general the farther is the atom from the keto group; the smaller is its contribution to the sign of the ORD curve. Conformational Analysis If two different 3D arrangements in space of the atoms in a molecule are interconvertible by free rotation about bonds, they are called conformations. If they are not interconvertible, they are called configurations. Configurations represent isomers that can be separated. Conformations represent conformers, which are rapidly interconvertible and thus cannot be separated. Conformations of Ethane For ethane there are two extreme conformations, i.e. conformations having highest and lowest energy. Those are shown below. For ethane the staggered conformation has the lowest potential energy and the eclipsed conformation has the highest potential energy. The difference in energy between the two forms is 12 kJmol-1. At ordinary temperatures, enough rotational energy is present for the ethane molecule rapidly to rotate, although it still spends most of its time at or near the energy minimum. 19 Conformational energy diagram for ethane. Conformations of Butane For 1,2-disubstituted ethanes, for example, n-butane, there are four extreme conformations. These are (i) a fully staggered conformation called anti, trans or antiperiplanar, (ii) another staggred conformation called gauche, (iii) a fully eclipsed conformation called synperiplanar and a partially eclipsed conformation. Anti conformation is the most stable conformation for n-butane and the energy difference between anti and gauche conformations is 3.8 kJmol-1. Eclipsed conformations are less stable compared to staggered conformations. The fully eclipsed conformation is the least stable. The energy difference between fully eclipsed and anti conformations is 17-25 kJmol-1. 20 In 1,2-disubstituted compounds the molecules generally adopts anti and gauche conformations. For example in 1,2-dichloroethane in CCl4, approximately 70% of the molecules are in anti conformation and around 30% of the molecules are in gauche conformation. For 1,2-dibromoethane the approximate percentages of anti and gauche conformations are 89% and 11% respectively. The eclipsed conformations are unpopulated and are pathways for the change from one staggered conformation to another. In most molecules of the type YCH2-CH2Y and YCH2-CH2X the anti conformation is the preferred conformation, but there are several exceptions. For example, molecules containing small electronegative atoms generally prefer gauche conformation. This is known as gauche effect, i.e. the tendency to adopt the structure which has the maximum gauche interactions between adjacent polar bonds. Thus molecules like 2-fluoroethanol and 1,2-difluoroethane prefer gauche conformation. In ethylene glycol gauche conformation is preferred. This is not only due to gauche effect but also due to hydrogen bonding between oxygen atoms on adjacent carbon atoms. Conformational Analysis of Cycloalkanes Cyclohexane The most stable conformation of cyclohexane is the chair conformation. Two other important conformations of cyclohexane are the boat and the twist conformations. These are less stable than chair conformation. The chair form is more stable than the twist form by about 21 kJmol-1. The twist form is more stable than the boat by about 6.3 kJmol-1 because the twist form has less eclipsing interactions. The twist and boat conformations are more flexible than chair but are destabilized by torsional strain. Boat form is destabilized also due to the interaction between flagpole hydrogens. 21 In the chair form six bonds are different from the other six. The up and down bonds are called axial and the others are called equatorial. At room temperature one cyclohexane chair conformation rapidly interconvert to another chair conformation. This interconversion is known as ring flip or ring inversion. During this interconversion all the axial bonds become equatorial and vice versa. Interconversion from one chair form to another is possible only through boat form and twist form. Ring inversion in cyclohexane In substituted cyclohexanes most of the compounds exist in chair conformation. But in certain bicyclic compounds the cyclohexane ring is forced to adopt a boat or a twist conformation. In mono-substituted cyclohexanes, the substituent normally prefers the equatorial position because in the axial position there is interaction between the substituent and the axial hydrogens in the 3 and 5 positions. This interaction is known as 1,3-diaxial interaction. Alkyl groups have a greater preference for the equatorial position than polar groups. For alkyl groups, the preference increases with size, although size seems to be unimportant for polar groups. In disubstituted compounds, the most stable conformation will have as many groups as possible in the equatorial position. In a cis-1,2-disubstituted cyclohexane, one substituent must be axial and the other equatorial. In a trans-1,2 compound both may be equatorial or both axial. Generally trans isomer (ee) is more stable than the cis-isomer. The relative stability is in the order, trans-ee > cis >trans-aa. Between the two cis isomers, the more stable isomer will have the bulky substituent in the equatorial position. 22 This is also true for 1,4-disubstituted cyclohexanes, but the reverse holds for 1,3 compounds: the trans isomer must have the ae conformation and the cis isomer may be aa or ee. For alkyl groups, the ee conformation predominates over the aa, but for other groups this is not necessarily so. For example, both trans-1,4-dibromocyclohexane and the corresponding dichloro compound have the ee and aa conformations about equally populated and most trans-1,2-dihalocyclohexanes exist predominantly in the aa conformation. In such cases the two halogen atoms are anti in the aa conformation, but gauche in the ee conformation. Ring inversion is slow in substituted cyclohexanes. Certain substituents slow down ring flip considerably, for example tertiary-butyl group. In polysubstituted cyclohexanes, if t-butyl group is present, it will always occupy an equatorial position. In most of the polysubstituted compounds, the bulky group occupies equatorial position. The relative sizes of various substituents are given below. Conformations of a few substituted cyclohexanes are described below. (a) 1,2-dimethyl cyclohexane:- The cis isomer will have ae arrangement and the trans isomer can have ee or aa conformation. Among the three, trans-ee is the most stable. Ring inversion of this conformation gives trans-aa which is the least stable. The cis isomer is intermediate in stability. trans-ee trans-aa cis (both conformations are equivalent) (b) 3-methylcyclohexanol:- The cis-ee conformation is the most stable one and the cis-aa is the least stable. Trans isomer is intermediate in stability. Among the trans isomers, the isomer with bulky methyl group in the equatorial position is more stable than the other. The stability order is shown below. HO HO OH OH trans cis-aa trans (c) Cyclohexane-1,3-diol:- In this case between the two cis-isomers, the diaxial isomer is more stable than the diequatorial isomer because of intramolecular hydrogen bonding. cis-ee O O H (d) 3-substituted cyclohexanones:- In 3-substituted cyclohexanones, the axial position is more stable than that in cyclohexane because in cyclohexanones, axial hydrogen is absent 23 at 1-position. Therefore, there is only one 1,3-diaxial interaction for an axial substituent in the 3-position. This effect is known as 3-alkylketone effect. X H O (f) 2-bromocyclohexanone:- In this compound axial bromo conformation is favoured. In this compound both C-Br and C=O bonds are strongly polar. When the bromine atom is equatorial dipolar repulsion is maximum and when bromine is axial dipolar repulsion is minimum. The dipolar repulsion is larger than 1,3-diaxial interactions and hence the conformation with bromine in the equatorial position is favoured. (g) Cyclohexane-1,4-diol:- This compound exists in twist boat conformation because intramolecular hydrogen bonding is possible in this conformation and it is not possible with chair form. H O H O (h) Cyclohexane-1,4-dione:- This compound shows a dipole moment. Since for the chair form, dipole moment is zero, the conformation should be something else. The actual conformation is a twist (twist boat) conformation. O O Decalin (bicyclo[4.4.0]decane) Two isomers are possible for decalin, cis and trans. Trans isomer is more stable by about 10.05 kJmol-1. Decalins can be regarded as 1,2-disubstituted cyclohexanes, then the trans form is ee form and the cis isomer is ae form. The cis isomer has three gauchebutane interactions which are not present in the trans form. Trans decalin is rigid and incapable of ring inversion. But cis form is conformationally mobile and undergoes ring inversion readily. Trans decalin gives two 24 NMR peaks, one due to axial hydrogens and the other due to equatorial hydrogens. But cis-decalin shows only one NMR peak because ring inversion interchanges axial and equatorial positions. Since cis-decalin has two possible conformations (because of ring inversion), There are four possible conformations for cis-2-decalol. H H H H HH OH OH 1a H 1b H HHO H OH H H 2b 2a Since an equatorial position is favoured, 1a and 2b are more stable than the other two. Trans decalin has only one stable conformation. Therefore trans-2-decalol has only two possible conformations, i.e. the OH group can be either equatorial or axial. The equatorial conformation is the more stable one. These two conformations are not interconvertible. H H OH H H OH H H Asymmetric Synthesis The preparation of a chiral compound in the form of a single enantiomer or a diastereomer is termed as asymmetric synthesis. In asymmetric synthesis during the creation of the asymmetric centre, the two isomers are formed in unequal amounts. There are several methods for achieving asymmetric synthesis. (i) By using an active Substrate:- If a new chiral center is created in a molecule that is already optically active, the two diastereomers are not formed in equal amounts. An example is shown below. In this reaction according to Cram’s rule 3 will be formed in larger amounts. 25 (ii) By using an active reagent:- A pair of enantiomers can be separated by using an optically active reagent which reacts faster with one enantiomer than the other. In certain case compounds containing no chiral centres can also be converted to an optically active compound. An example is shown below. (iii) By using optically active catalyst or solvent:- Ketones and substituted alkenes can be converted to optically active secondary alcohols and alkanes by treatment with hydrogen and chiral homogeneous catalysts. Several other examples are also known. Similarly asymmetric synthesis can be achieved by using chiral solvents also. (iv) By reactions in the presence of circularly polarized light:- If in photochemical reactions, circularly polarized light is used one enantiomer should be formed in more quantities than the other. But this could not be achieved so far. In certain cases use of left and right circularly polarized light has given enantiomers in unequal amounts. But the optical purity has always been very less. E-Z Nomenclature for Geometrical Isomers According to the E-Z nomenclature the groups at both doubly bonded carbon atom are arranged according to the sequence rule. If the higher priority groups are on the same side that isomer is called Z-isomer and if the higher priority groups are on the opposite side that isomer is called E-isomer. Some examples are given below. 26