Sometimes you come across a bond in chemistry that just shouts at you. This happened to me in 1989[cite]10.1039/C39890001722[/cite] with the molecule shown below. Here is its story and, 26 years later, how I responded.
Posts Tagged ‘unusual chemical shift’
Fine-tuning a (hydrogen) bond into symmetry.
Friday, January 23rd, 2015Tags:energy, high chemical shifts, New Hampshire, unusual chemical shift
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The NMR spectra of methano[10]annulene and its dianion. The diatropic/paratropic inversion.
Saturday, October 26th, 2013The 1H NMR spectrum of an aromatic molecule such as benzene is iconic; one learns that the unusual chemical shift of the protons (~δ 7-8 ppm) is due to their deshielding by a diatropic ring current resulting from the circulation of six aromatic π-electrons following the Hückel 4n+2 rule. But rather less well-known is the spectacular inversion of these effects as induced by the paratropic circulation of 4n electrons. A 4n+2 rule can be converted to a 4n one by the addition of two electrons, and chemically this can be done by reduction with lithium metal to form a dianion. Fortunately, this experiment has been done for a molecule known as methano[10]annulene. This is a 4n+2 aromatic molecule 1 with ten π-electrons (n=2) that can be reduced with lithium metal to form an ion-pair 2 comprising lithium cations and the twelve π-electron (4n, n=3) methano[10]annulene dianion.[cite]10.1002/anie.198816921[/cite]
Tags:chemical shifts, lithium metal, unusual chemical shift
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