Posts Tagged ‘Interesting chemistry’
Tuesday, December 1st, 2009
The Grignard reaction is encountered early on in most chemistry courses, and most labs include the preparation of this reagent, typically by the following reaction:
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Tags:Hypervalency, Interesting chemistry, metal, metal atom, metal centres, Mg atom
Posted in Hypervalency, Interesting chemistry | 1 Comment »
Sunday, November 29th, 2009
The so-called Fine tuned model of the universe asserts that any small change in several of the dimensionless fundamental physical constants would make the universe radically different (and hence one in which life as we know it could not exist). I suggest here that there may be molecules which epitomize the same principle in chemistry. Consider for example dimethyl formamide. The NMR spectra of this molecule reveal that at room temperature, the two methyl groups are inequivalent, indicating that the rate constant for rotation about the C-N bond has a very particular range of values at the temperatures at which most living organisms exist on our planet.
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Tags:active site, Interesting chemistry
Posted in Interesting chemistry | 4 Comments »
Wednesday, November 18th, 2009
Curly arrow pushing is one of the essential tools of a mechanistic chemist. Many a published article will speculate about the arrow pushing in a mechanism, although it is becoming increasingly common for these speculations to be backed up by quantitative quantum mechanical and dynamical calculations. These have the potential of exposing the underlying choreography of the electronic dance (the order in which the steps take place). The basic grammar of describing that choreography tends to be the full-headed curly arrow for closed shell systems and its half-barbed equivalent for open shell systems. An effectively unstated and hence implicit rule for closed shell systems is that only one curly arrow is used per breaking or forming bond, i.e. electrons move around bonds in pairs. So consider the following reaction (inspired by a posting on Steve Bachrach’s blog)
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Tags:animation, closed shell systems, Interesting chemistry, mechanistic chemist, open shell systems, pericyclic, Steve Bachrach
Posted in Curly arrows, Interesting chemistry | 10 Comments »
Wednesday, November 11th, 2009
In an earlier post I wrote about the iconic SN1 solvolysis reaction, and presented a model for the transition state involving 13 water molecules. Here, I follow this up with an improved molecule containing 16 water molecules, and how the barrier for this model compares with experiment. This latter is nicely summarized in the following article: Solvolysis of t-butyl chloride in water-rich methanol + water mixtures, which (for pure water) cites the following activation parameters
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Tags:animation, Darrin York, energy, Historical, Interesting chemistry, Martin Karplus, Organic reaction mechanism, overall free energy
Posted in Interesting chemistry | 7 Comments »
Saturday, October 3rd, 2009
Quite a few threads have developed in this series of posts, and following each leads in rather different directions. In this previous post the comment was made that coordinating a carbon dication to the face of a cyclopentadienyl anion resulted in a monocation which had a remarkably high proton affinity. So it is a simple progression to ask whether these systems may in turn harbour a large affinity for binding not so much a H+ as the next homologue He2+?
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Tags:AIM, bonding, Cambridge, chemical bonds, double-hybrid, ELF, gas phase, Hypervalency, hypervalent, Interesting chemistry, Krapp and co
Posted in Hypervalency, Interesting chemistry | 1 Comment »
Saturday, October 3rd, 2009
The previous posts have seen how a molecule containing a hypervalent carbon atom can be designed by making a series of logical chemical connections. Another logical step is to investigate whether the adjacent atoms in the periodic table may exhibit similar effects (C2+ ≡ B+ ≡ N3+ ≡ Be ≡ O4+). So here are reported some results (B3LYP/6-311G(d,p) ) for boron, beryllium and nitrogen, for the general tetramethyl substituted system shown below
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Tags:Hypervalency, Interesting chemistry, logical chemical connections
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Friday, October 2nd, 2009
The previous post talked about making links or connections. And part of the purpose for presenting this chemistry as a blog is to expose how these connections are made, or or less as it happens in real time (and not the chronologically sanitized version of discovery that most research papers are). So each post represents an evolution or mutation from the previous one. To recapitulate, we have seen how the idea of cyclopentadienyl anion as a ligand for a dipositive carbon atom has evolved. Let us move in yet another direction; the cyclobutadienyl dianion. This ligand has recently been shown to bind Mg2+ (DOI: 10.1002/ejic.200800066), so why not He2+? And picking up again the previous theme, we will then protonate the bound complex. The result now is a monocation, and it has the C4v-symmetric structure shown below (DOI: 10042/to-2438). This bears some resemblance to pyramidane, a neutral C5H4 compound with hemispherical carbon reported in 2001[1] which is also a stable minimum in the potential energy surface.
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References
- J.P. Kenny, K.M. Krueger, J.C. Rienstra-Kiracofe, and H.F. Schaefer, "C<sub>5</sub>H<sub>4</sub>: Pyramidane and Its Low-Lying Isomers", The Journal of Physical Chemistry A, vol. 105, pp. 7745-7750, 2001. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp011642r
Tags:Hypervalency, Interesting chemistry, potential energy surface, pseudo
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Friday, October 2nd, 2009
Science is about making connections. And these can often be made between the most unlikely concepts. Thus in the posts I have made about pentavalent carbon, one can identify a series of conceptual connections. The first, by Matthias Bickelhaupt and co, resulted in the suggestion of a possible frozen SN2 transition state. They used astatine, and this enabled a connection to be made between another good nucleophile/nucleofuge, cyclopentadienyl anion. This too seems to lead to a frozen Sn2 transition state. The cyclopentadienyl theme then asks whether this anion can coordinate a much simpler unit, a C2+ dication (rather than Bickelhaupt’s suggestion of a (NC)3C+ cation/radical) and indeed that complex is also frozen, again with 5-coordinate carbon, and this time with five equal C-C bonds. So here, the perhaps inevitable progression of ideas moves on to examining the properties of this complex, the outcome being a quite counter-intuitive suggestion which moves us into new territory.
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Tags:CHs, Hypervalency, Interesting chemistry, Matthias Bickelhaupt
Posted in Hypervalency, Interesting chemistry | 6 Comments »
Wednesday, September 30th, 2009
In the previous two posts, I noted the recent suggestion of how a stable frozen SN2 transition state might be made. This is characterised by a central carbon with five coordinated ligands. The original suggestion included two astatine atoms as ligands (X=At), but in my post I suggested an alternative which would have five carbon ligands instead (X=cyclopentadienyl anion).
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Tags:Ge, Hypervalency, Interesting chemistry
Posted in Hypervalency, Interesting chemistry | 3 Comments »