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Cyclic compound

A cyclic compound (or ring compound) is a term for a compound in the field of chemistry in which one or more series of atoms in the compound is connected to form a ring. Rings may vary in size from three to many atoms, and include examples where all the atoms are carbon (i.e., are carbocycles), none of the atoms are carbon (inorganic cyclic compounds), or where both carbon and non-carbon atoms are present (heterocyclic compounds). Depending on the ring size, the bond order of the individual links between ring atoms, and their arrangements within the rings, carbocyclic and heterocyclic compounds may be aromatic or non-aromatic; in the latter case, they may vary from being fully saturated to having varying numbers of multiple bonds between the ring atoms. Because of the tremendous diversity allowed, in combination, by the valences of common atoms and their ability to form rings, the number of possible cyclic structures, even of small size (e.g., < 17 total atoms) numbers in the many billions.

Adding to their complexity and number, closing of atoms into rings may lock particular atoms with distinct substitution (by functional groups) such that stereochemistry and chirality of the compound results, including some manifestations that are unique to rings (e.g., configurational isomers). As well, depending on ring size, the three-dimensional shapes of particular cyclic structures – typically rings of five atoms and larger – can vary and interconvert such that conformational isomerism is displayed. Indeed, the development of this important chemical concept arose historically in reference to cyclic compounds. Finally, cyclic compounds, because of the unique shapes, reactivities, properties, and bioactivities that they engender, are the majority of all molecules involved in the biochemistry, structure, and function of living organisms, and in man-made molecules such as drugs, pesticides, etc.

Structure and classification

A cyclic compound or ring compound is a compound in which at least some its atoms are connected to form a ring.[1] Rings vary in size from three to many tens or even hundreds of atoms. Examples of ring compounds readily include cases where:

  • all the atoms are carbon (i.e., are carbocycles),
  • none of the atoms are carbon (inorganic cyclic compounds),[2] or where
  • both carbon and non-carbon atoms are present (heterocyclic compounds).

Common atoms can (as a result of their valences) form varying numbers of bonds, and many common atoms readily form rings. In addition, depending on the ring size, the bond order of the individual links between ring atoms, and their arrangements within the rings, cyclic compounds may be aromatic or non-aromatic; in the case of non-aromatic cyclic compounds, they may vary from being fully saturated to having varying numbers of multiple bonds. As a consequence of the constitutional variability that is thermodynamically possible in cyclic structures, the number of possible cyclic structures, even of small size (e.g., <17 atoms) numbers in the many billions.[3]

Moreover, the closing of atoms into rings may lock particular functional groupsubstituted atoms into place, resulting in stereochemistry and chirality being associated with the compound, including some manifestations that are unique to rings (e.g., configurational isomers);[4] As well, depending on ring size, the three-dimensional shapes of particular cyclic structures — typically rings of five atoms and larger — can vary and interconvert such that conformational isomerism is displayed.[4]

Carbocycles

The vast majority of cyclic compounds are organic, and of these, a significant and conceptually important portion are composed of rings made only of carbon atoms (i.e., they are carbocycles).[citation needed]

Inorganic cyclic compounds

Inorganic atoms form cyclic compounds as well. Examples include sulfur (e.g. in polysulfides), silicon (e.g., in silanes), phosphorus (e.g., in phosphanes, metaphosphates and other phosphoric acid derivatives), and boron (e.g., in triboric acid).[citation needed] When carbon in benzene is "replaced" by other elements, e.g., as in borabenzene, silabenzene, germanabenzene, stannabenzene, and phosphorine, aromaticity is retained, and so aromatic inorganic cyclic compounds are also known and well-characterized.[citation needed]

Heterocyclic compounds

Cyclic compounds that have both carbon and non-carbon atoms present are termed heterocyclic compounds;[citation needed] alternatively the name can refer to inorganic cyclic compounds, such as siloxanes and borazines, that have more than one type of atom in their rings.[citation needed] Hantzsch–Widman nomenclature is recommended by the IUPAC for naming heterocycles, but many common names remain in regular use.[citation needed]

Macrocycles

 

The term macrocycle is used for compounds having a rings of 8 or more atoms.[5][6] Macrocycles may be fully carbocyclic, heterocyclic but having limited heteroatoms (e.g., in lactones and lactams), or be rich in heteroatoms and displaying significant symmetry (e.g., in the case of chelating macrocycles). Macrocycles can access a number of stable conformations, with preference to reside in conformations that minimize transannular nonbonded interactions within the ring (e.g., with the chair and chair-boat being more stable than the boat-boat conformation for cyclooctane, because of the interactions depicted by the arcs shown).[citation needed] Medium rings (8-11 atoms) are the most strained, with between 9-13 (kcal/mol) strain energy, and analysis of factors important in the conformations of larger macrocycles can be modeled using medium ring conformations.[7] Conformational analysis of odd-membered rings suggests they tend to reside in less symmetrical forms with smaller energy differences between stable conformations.[8]

 
Chelating macrocyclic structures of interest in inorganic and supramolecular chemistry, an example array. A, the crown ether, 18-crown-6; B, the simple tetra-aza chelator, cyclam; C, an example porphyrin, the unsubstituted porphine; D, a mixed amine/imine, the Curtis macrocycle; E, the related enamine/imine Jäger macrocycle, and F, the tetracarboxylate-derivative DOTA macrocycle.

Nomenclature

IUPAC nomenclature has extensive rules to cover the naming of cyclic structures, both as core structures, and as substituents appended to alicyclic structures.[citation needed] The term macrocycle is used when a ring-containing compound has a ring of 12 or more atoms.[5][6] The term polycyclic is used when more than one ring appears in a single molecule. Naphthalene is formally a polycyclic compound, but is more specifically named as a bicyclic compound. Several examples of macrocyclic and polycyclic structures are given in the final gallery below.

The atoms that are part of the ring structure are called annular atoms.[9]

Isomerism

Stereochemistry

The closing of atoms into rings may lock particular atoms with distinct substitution by functional groups such that the result is stereochemistry and chirality of the compound, including some manifestations that are unique to rings (e.g., configurational isomers).[4]

Conformational isomerism

 
Chair and boat conformers in cyclohexanes. Two conformers of cyclohexane, the chair at left, and the boat at right (in German, respectively, Sessel and Wanne, the latter meaning "bath").
 
cis-1,4-Dimethylcyclohexane, in chair form, minimising steric interactions between the methyl groups in the directly opposing 1,4-positions of the cyclohexane ring.
General description. The structures are shown in line angle representation, though in the image at left, the lines projecting from the cyclohexane are not terminal methyl groups; rather, they indicate possible positions that might be occupied by substituents (functional groups) attached to the ring. In the image at left, those groups projecting upward and downward are termed axial substituents (a), and those groups projecting around the conceptual equator are termed equatorial substituents (e). Note, in general, the axial substituents are closer in space to one another (allowing for repulsive interactions); moreover, in the boat form, axial substituents in directly opposing positions (12 o'clock and 6 o'clock, termed "1,4-") are very close in space, and therefore give rise to even greater repulsion. These and other types of strain are used to explain the observation that the chair conformation of cyclohexanes is the favored conformation.[4]

Depending on ring size, the three-dimensional shapes of particular cyclic structures—typically rings of 5-atoms and larger—can vary and interconvert such that conformational isomerism is displayed.[4] Indeed, the development of this important chemical concept arose, historically, in reference to cyclic compounds. For instance, cyclohexanes—six membered carbocycles with no double bonds, to which various substituents might be attached, see image—display an equilibrium between two conformations, the chair and the boat, as shown in the image.

The chair conformation is the favored configuration, because in this conformation, the steric strain, eclipsing strain, and angle strain that are otherwise possible are minimized.[4] Which of the possible chair conformations predominate in cyclohexanes bearing one or more substituents depends on the substituents, and where they are located on the ring; generally, "bulky" substituents—those groups with large volumes, or groups that are otherwise repulsive in their interactions[citation needed]—prefer to occupy an equatorial location.[4] An example of interactions within a molecule that would lead to steric strain, leading to a shift in equilibrium from boat to chair, is the interaction between the two methyl groups in cis-1,4-dimethylcyclohexane. In this molecule, the two methyl groups are in opposing positions of the ring (1,4-), and their cis stereochemistry projects both of these groups toward the same side of the ring. Hence, if forced into the higher energy boat form, these methyl groups are in steric contact, repel one another, and drive the equilibrium toward the chair conformation.[4]

Aromaticity

Cyclic compounds may or may not exhibit aromaticity; benzene is an example of an aromatic cyclic compound, while cyclohexane is non-aromatic. In organic chemistry, the term aromaticity is used to describe a cyclic (ring-shaped), planar (flat) molecule that exhibits unusual stability as compared to other geometric or connective arrangements of the same set of atoms. As a result of their stability, it is very difficult to cause aromatic molecules to break apart and to react with other substances. Organic compounds that are not aromatic are classified as aliphatic compounds—they might be cyclic, but only aromatic rings have especial stability (low reactivity).

Since one of the most commonly encountered aromatic systems of compounds in organic chemistry is based on derivatives of the prototypical aromatic compound benzene (an aromatic hydrocarbon common in petroleum and its distillates), the word “aromatic” is occasionally used to refer informally to benzene derivatives, and this is how it was first defined. Nevertheless, many non-benzene aromatic compounds exist. In living organisms, for example, the most common aromatic rings are the double-ringed bases in RNA and DNA. A functional group or other substituent that is aromatic is called an aryl group.

The earliest use of the term “aromatic” was in an article by August Wilhelm Hofmann in 1855. Hofmann used the term for a class of benzene compounds, many of which do have odors (aromas), unlike pure saturated hydrocarbons. Today, there is no general relationship between aromaticity as a chemical property and the olfactory properties of such compounds (how they smell), although in 1855, before the structure of benzene or organic compounds was understood, chemists like Hofmann were beginning to understand that odiferous molecules from plants, such as terpenes, had chemical properties we recognize today are similar to unsaturated petroleum hydrocarbons like benzene.

In terms of the electronic nature of the molecule, aromaticity describes a conjugated system often made of alternating single and double bonds in a ring. This configuration allows for the electrons in the molecule’s pi system to be delocalized around the ring, increasing the molecule's stability. The molecule cannot be represented by one structure, but rather a resonance hybrid of different structures, such as with the two resonance structures of benzene. These molecules cannot be found in either one of these representations, with the longer single bonds in one location and the shorter double bond in another (See Theory below). Rather, the molecule exhibits bond lengths in between those of single and double bonds. This commonly seen model of aromatic rings, namely the idea that benzene was formed from a six-membered carbon ring with alternating single and double bonds (cyclohexatriene), was developed by August Kekulé (see History section below). The model for benzene consists of two resonance forms, which corresponds to the double and single bonds superimposing to produce six one-and-a-half bonds. Benzene is a more stable molecule than would be expected without accounting for charge delocalization.[citation needed]

Principal uses

Because of the unique shapes, reactivities, properties, and bioactivities that they engender, cyclic compounds are the largest majority of all molecules involved in the biochemistry, structure, and function of living organisms, and in the man-made molecules (e.g., drugs, herbicides, etc.) through which man attempts to exert control over nature and biological systems.

Synthetic reactions

Important general reactions for forming rings

 
Dieckmann ring-closing reaction

There are a variety of specialized reactions whose use is solely the formation of rings, and these will be discussed below. In addition to those, there are a wide variety of general organic reactions that historically have been crucial in the development, first, of understanding the concepts of ring chemistry, and second, of reliable procedures for preparing ring structures in high yield, and with defined orientation of ring substituents (i.e., defined stereochemistry). These general reactions include:

Ring-closing reactions

In organic chemistry, a variety of synthetic procures are particularly useful in closing carbocyclic and other rings; these are termed ring-closing reactions. Examples include:

Ring-opening reactions

A variety of further synthetic procedures are particularly useful in opening carbocyclic and other rings, generally which contain a double bound or other functional group "handle" to facilitate chemistry; these are termed ring-opening reactions. Examples include:

Ring expansion and ring contraction reactions

Ring expansion and contraction reactions are common in organic synthesis, and are frequently encountered in pericyclic reactions. Ring expansions and contractions can involve the insertion of a functional group such as the case with Baeyer–Villiger oxidation of cyclic ketones, rearrangements of cyclic carbocycles as seen in intramolecular Diels-Alder reactions, or collapse or rearrangement of bicyclic compounds as several examples.

Examples

Simple, mono-cyclic examples

The following are examples of simple and aromatic carbocycles, inorganic cyclic compounds, and heterocycles:

Complex and polycyclic examples

The following are examples of cyclic compounds exhibiting more complex ring systems and stereochemical features:

See also

References

  1. ^ March, Jerry (1985), Advanced Organic Chemistry: Reactions, Mechanisms, and Structure (3rd ed.), New York: Wiley, ISBN 0-471-85472-7[page needed]
  2. ^ Halduc, I. (1961). "Classification of inorganic cyclic compounds". Journal of Structural Chemistry. 2 (3): 350–8. doi:10.1007/BF01141802. S2CID 93804259.
  3. ^ Reymond, Jean-Louis (2015). "The Chemical Space Project". Accounts of Chemical Research. 48 (3): 722–30. doi:10.1021/ar500432k. PMID 25687211.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h William Reusch (2010). "Stereoisomers Part I" in Virtual Textbook of Organic Chemistry. Michigan State University. from the original on 10 March 2015. Retrieved 7 April 2015.
  5. ^ a b Still, W.Clark; Galynker, Igor (1981). "Chemical consequences of conformation in macrocyclic compounds". Tetrahedron. 37 (23): 3981–96. doi:10.1016/S0040-4020(01)93273-9.
  6. ^ a b J. D. Dunitz (1968). J. D. Dunitz and J. A. Ibers (ed.). Perspectives in Structural Chemistry. Vol. 2. New York: Wiley. pp. 1–70.
  7. ^ Eliel, E.L., Wilen, S.H. and Mander, L.S. (1994) Stereochemistry of Organic Compounds, John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York.[page needed]
  8. ^ Anet, F.A.L.; St. Jacques, M.; Henrichs, P.M.; Cheng, A.K.; Krane, J.; Wong, L. (1974). "Conformational analysis of medium-ring ketones". Tetrahedron. 30 (12): 1629–37. doi:10.1016/S0040-4020(01)90685-4.
  9. ^ Morris, Christopher G.; Press, Academic (1992). Academic Press Dictionary of Science and Technology. Gulf Professional Publishing. p. 120. ISBN 9780122004001. from the original on 2021-04-13. Retrieved 2020-09-14.
  10. ^ Löwe, J; Li, H; Downing, K.H; Nogales, E (2001). "Refined structure of αβ-tubulin at 3.5 Å resolution". Journal of Molecular Biology. 313 (5): 1045–57. doi:10.1006/jmbi.2001.5077. PMID 11700061. from the original on 2021-01-22. Retrieved 2020-09-14.

Further reading

  • Jürgen-Hinrich Fuhrhop & Gustav Penzlin, 1986, "Organic synthesis: concepts, methods, starting materials," Weinheim, BW, DEU:VCH, ISBN 0895732467, see [1], accessed 19 June 2015.
  • Michael B. Smith & Jerry March, 2007, "March's Advanced Organic Chemistry: Reactions, Mechanisms, and Structure," 6th Ed., New York, NY, USA:Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0470084944, see [2], accessed 19 June 2015.
  • Francis A. Carey & Richard J. Sundberg, 2006, "Title Advanced Organic Chemistry: Part A: Structure and Mechanisms," 4th Edn., New York, NY, USA:Springer Science & Business Media, ISBN 0306468565, see [3], accessed 19 June 2015.
  • Michael B. Smith, 2011, "Organic Chemistry: An Acid—Base Approach," Boca Raton, FL, USA:CRC Press, ISBN 1420079212, see [4], accessed 19 June 2015. [May not be most necessary material for this article, but significant content here is available online.]
  • Jonathan Clayden, Nick Greeves & Stuart Warren, 2012, "Organic Chemistry," Oxford, Oxon, GBR:Oxford University Press, ISBN 0199270295, see [5], accessed 19 June 2015.
  • László Kürti & Barbara Czakó, 2005, "Strategic Applications of Named Reactions in Organic Synthesis: Background and Detailed Mechanisms, Amsterdam, NH, NLD:Elsevier Academic Press, 2005ISBN 0124297854, see [6], accessed 19 June 2015.

External links

cyclic, compound, cyclic, compound, ring, compound, term, compound, field, chemistry, which, more, series, atoms, compound, connected, form, ring, rings, vary, size, from, three, many, atoms, include, examples, where, atoms, carbon, carbocycles, none, atoms, c. A cyclic compound or ring compound is a term for a compound in the field of chemistry in which one or more series of atoms in the compound is connected to form a ring Rings may vary in size from three to many atoms and include examples where all the atoms are carbon i e are carbocycles none of the atoms are carbon inorganic cyclic compounds or where both carbon and non carbon atoms are present heterocyclic compounds Depending on the ring size the bond order of the individual links between ring atoms and their arrangements within the rings carbocyclic and heterocyclic compounds may be aromatic or non aromatic in the latter case they may vary from being fully saturated to having varying numbers of multiple bonds between the ring atoms Because of the tremendous diversity allowed in combination by the valences of common atoms and their ability to form rings the number of possible cyclic structures even of small size e g lt 17 total atoms numbers in the many billions Cyclic compound examples All carbon carbocyclic and more complex natural cyclic compounds Ingenol a complex terpenoid natural product related to but simpler than the paclitaxel that follows which displays a complex ring structure including 3 5 and 7 membered non aromatic carbocyclic rings Cycloalkanes the simplest carbocycles including cyclopropane cyclobutane cyclopentane and cyclohexane Note elsewhere an organic chemistry shorthand is used where hydrogen atoms are inferred as present to fill the carbon s valence of 4 rather than their being shown explicitly Paclitaxel another complex plant derived terpenoid also a natural product displaying a complex multi ring structure including 4 6 and 8 membered rings carbocyclic and heterocyclic aromatic and non aromatic Adding to their complexity and number closing of atoms into rings may lock particular atoms with distinct substitution by functional groups such that stereochemistry and chirality of the compound results including some manifestations that are unique to rings e g configurational isomers As well depending on ring size the three dimensional shapes of particular cyclic structures typically rings of five atoms and larger can vary and interconvert such that conformational isomerism is displayed Indeed the development of this important chemical concept arose historically in reference to cyclic compounds Finally cyclic compounds because of the unique shapes reactivities properties and bioactivities that they engender are the majority of all molecules involved in the biochemistry structure and function of living organisms and in man made molecules such as drugs pesticides etc Contents 1 Structure and classification 1 1 Carbocycles 1 2 Inorganic cyclic compounds 1 3 Heterocyclic compounds 1 4 Macrocycles 1 5 Nomenclature 2 Isomerism 2 1 Stereochemistry 2 2 Conformational isomerism 3 Aromaticity 4 Principal uses 5 Synthetic reactions 5 1 Important general reactions for forming rings 5 2 Ring closing reactions 5 3 Ring opening reactions 5 4 Ring expansion and ring contraction reactions 6 Examples 6 1 Simple mono cyclic examples 6 2 Complex and polycyclic examples 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksStructure and classification EditA cyclic compound or ring compound is a compound in which at least some its atoms are connected to form a ring 1 Rings vary in size from three to many tens or even hundreds of atoms Examples of ring compounds readily include cases where all the atoms are carbon i e are carbocycles none of the atoms are carbon inorganic cyclic compounds 2 or where both carbon and non carbon atoms are present heterocyclic compounds Common atoms can as a result of their valences form varying numbers of bonds and many common atoms readily form rings In addition depending on the ring size the bond order of the individual links between ring atoms and their arrangements within the rings cyclic compounds may be aromatic or non aromatic in the case of non aromatic cyclic compounds they may vary from being fully saturated to having varying numbers of multiple bonds As a consequence of the constitutional variability that is thermodynamically possible in cyclic structures the number of possible cyclic structures even of small size e g lt 17 atoms numbers in the many billions 3 Moreover the closing of atoms into rings may lock particular functional group substituted atoms into place resulting in stereochemistry and chirality being associated with the compound including some manifestations that are unique to rings e g configurational isomers 4 As well depending on ring size the three dimensional shapes of particular cyclic structures typically rings of five atoms and larger can vary and interconvert such that conformational isomerism is displayed 4 Carbocycles Edit The vast majority of cyclic compounds are organic and of these a significant and conceptually important portion are composed of rings made only of carbon atoms i e they are carbocycles citation needed Inorganic cyclic compounds Edit Inorganic atoms form cyclic compounds as well Examples include sulfur e g in polysulfides silicon e g in silanes phosphorus e g in phosphanes metaphosphates and other phosphoric acid derivatives and boron e g in triboric acid citation needed When carbon in benzene is replaced by other elements e g as in borabenzene silabenzene germanabenzene stannabenzene and phosphorine aromaticity is retained and so aromatic inorganic cyclic compounds are also known and well characterized citation needed Heterocyclic compounds Edit Cyclic compounds that have both carbon and non carbon atoms present are termed heterocyclic compounds citation needed alternatively the name can refer to inorganic cyclic compounds such as siloxanes and borazines that have more than one type of atom in their rings citation needed Hantzsch Widman nomenclature is recommended by the IUPAC for naming heterocycles but many common names remain in regular use citation needed Macrocycles Edit The term macrocycle is used for compounds having a rings of 8 or more atoms 5 6 Macrocycles may be fully carbocyclic heterocyclic but having limited heteroatoms e g in lactones and lactams or be rich in heteroatoms and displaying significant symmetry e g in the case of chelating macrocycles Macrocycles can access a number of stable conformations with preference to reside in conformations that minimize transannular nonbonded interactions within the ring e g with the chair and chair boat being more stable than the boat boat conformation for cyclooctane because of the interactions depicted by the arcs shown citation needed Medium rings 8 11 atoms are the most strained with between 9 13 kcal mol strain energy and analysis of factors important in the conformations of larger macrocycles can be modeled using medium ring conformations 7 Conformational analysis of odd membered rings suggests they tend to reside in less symmetrical forms with smaller energy differences between stable conformations 8 Chelating macrocyclic structures of interest in inorganic and supramolecular chemistry an example array A the crown ether 18 crown 6 B the simple tetra aza chelator cyclam C an example porphyrin the unsubstituted porphine D a mixed amine imine the Curtis macrocycle E the related enamine imine Jager macrocycle and F the tetracarboxylate derivative DOTA macrocycle Nomenclature Edit IUPAC nomenclature has extensive rules to cover the naming of cyclic structures both as core structures and as substituents appended to alicyclic structures citation needed The term macrocycle is used when a ring containing compound has a ring of 12 or more atoms 5 6 The term polycyclic is used when more than one ring appears in a single molecule Naphthalene is formally a polycyclic compound but is more specifically named as a bicyclic compound Several examples of macrocyclic and polycyclic structures are given in the final gallery below The atoms that are part of the ring structure are called annular atoms 9 Isomerism EditStereochemistry Edit The closing of atoms into rings may lock particular atoms with distinct substitution by functional groups such that the result is stereochemistry and chirality of the compound including some manifestations that are unique to rings e g configurational isomers 4 Conformational isomerism Edit Chair and boat conformers in cyclohexanes Two conformers of cyclohexane the chair at left and the boat at right in German respectively Sessel and Wanne the latter meaning bath cis 1 4 Dimethylcyclohexane in chair form minimising steric interactions between the methyl groups in the directly opposing 1 4 positions of the cyclohexane ring General description The structures are shown in line angle representation though in the image at left the lines projecting from the cyclohexane are not terminal methyl groups rather they indicate possible positions that might be occupied by substituents functional groups attached to the ring In the image at left those groups projecting upward and downward are termed axial substituents a and those groups projecting around the conceptual equator are termed equatorial substituents e Note in general the axial substituents are closer in space to one another allowing for repulsive interactions moreover in the boat form axial substituents in directly opposing positions 12 o clock and 6 o clock termed 1 4 are very close in space and therefore give rise to even greater repulsion These and other types of strain are used to explain the observation that the chair conformation of cyclohexanes is the favored conformation 4 Depending on ring size the three dimensional shapes of particular cyclic structures typically rings of 5 atoms and larger can vary and interconvert such that conformational isomerism is displayed 4 Indeed the development of this important chemical concept arose historically in reference to cyclic compounds For instance cyclohexanes six membered carbocycles with no double bonds to which various substituents might be attached see image display an equilibrium between two conformations the chair and the boat as shown in the image The chair conformation is the favored configuration because in this conformation the steric strain eclipsing strain and angle strain that are otherwise possible are minimized 4 Which of the possible chair conformations predominate in cyclohexanes bearing one or more substituents depends on the substituents and where they are located on the ring generally bulky substituents those groups with large volumes or groups that are otherwise repulsive in their interactions citation needed prefer to occupy an equatorial location 4 An example of interactions within a molecule that would lead to steric strain leading to a shift in equilibrium from boat to chair is the interaction between the two methyl groups in cis 1 4 dimethylcyclohexane In this molecule the two methyl groups are in opposing positions of the ring 1 4 and their cis stereochemistry projects both of these groups toward the same side of the ring Hence if forced into the higher energy boat form these methyl groups are in steric contact repel one another and drive the equilibrium toward the chair conformation 4 Aromaticity EditThis article s edit history is not complete Some of the article text s edit history exists at Aromaticity due to copying and pasting between articles This may be a violation of the CC BY SA and or GFDL if proper attribution was not made in an edit summary or on the talk page Please see Wikipedia Merge and Wikipedia How to break up a page for details of when such copying and pasting is acceptable and when it is not and how to correctly attribute using links in the edit summaries You can also read the copying within Wikipedia guideline for an overview of the issues involved Cyclic compounds may or may not exhibit aromaticity benzene is an example of an aromatic cyclic compound while cyclohexane is non aromatic In organic chemistry the term aromaticity is used to describe a cyclic ring shaped planar flat molecule that exhibits unusual stability as compared to other geometric or connective arrangements of the same set of atoms As a result of their stability it is very difficult to cause aromatic molecules to break apart and to react with other substances Organic compounds that are not aromatic are classified as aliphatic compounds they might be cyclic but only aromatic rings have especial stability low reactivity Since one of the most commonly encountered aromatic systems of compounds in organic chemistry is based on derivatives of the prototypical aromatic compound benzene an aromatic hydrocarbon common in petroleum and its distillates the word aromatic is occasionally used to refer informally to benzene derivatives and this is how it was first defined Nevertheless many non benzene aromatic compounds exist In living organisms for example the most common aromatic rings are the double ringed bases in RNA and DNA A functional group or other substituent that is aromatic is called an aryl group The earliest use of the term aromatic was in an article by August Wilhelm Hofmann in 1855 Hofmann used the term for a class of benzene compounds many of which do have odors aromas unlike pure saturated hydrocarbons Today there is no general relationship between aromaticity as a chemical property and the olfactory properties of such compounds how they smell although in 1855 before the structure of benzene or organic compounds was understood chemists like Hofmann were beginning to understand that odiferous molecules from plants such as terpenes had chemical properties we recognize today are similar to unsaturated petroleum hydrocarbons like benzene In terms of the electronic nature of the molecule aromaticity describes a conjugated system often made of alternating single and double bonds in a ring This configuration allows for the electrons in the molecule s pi system to be delocalized around the ring increasing the molecule s stability The molecule cannot be represented by one structure but rather a resonance hybrid of different structures such as with the two resonance structures of benzene These molecules cannot be found in either one of these representations with the longer single bonds in one location and the shorter double bond in another See Theory below Rather the molecule exhibits bond lengths in between those of single and double bonds This commonly seen model of aromatic rings namely the idea that benzene was formed from a six membered carbon ring with alternating single and double bonds cyclohexatriene was developed by August Kekule see History section below The model for benzene consists of two resonance forms which corresponds to the double and single bonds superimposing to produce six one and a half bonds Benzene is a more stable molecule than would be expected without accounting for charge delocalization citation needed Principal uses EditBecause of the unique shapes reactivities properties and bioactivities that they engender cyclic compounds are the largest majority of all molecules involved in the biochemistry structure and function of living organisms and in the man made molecules e g drugs herbicides etc through which man attempts to exert control over nature and biological systems Synthetic reactions EditImportant general reactions for forming rings Edit Dieckmann ring closing reaction There are a variety of specialized reactions whose use is solely the formation of rings and these will be discussed below In addition to those there are a wide variety of general organic reactions that historically have been crucial in the development first of understanding the concepts of ring chemistry and second of reliable procedures for preparing ring structures in high yield and with defined orientation of ring substituents i e defined stereochemistry These general reactions include Acyloin condensation Anodic oxidations and the Dieckmann condensation as applied to ring formation Ring closing reactions Edit In organic chemistry a variety of synthetic procures are particularly useful in closing carbocyclic and other rings these are termed ring closing reactions Examples include alkyne trimerisation the Bergman cyclization of an enediyne the Diels Alder between a conjugated diene and a substituted alkene and other cycloaddition reactions the Nazarov cyclization reaction originally being the cyclization of a divinyl ketone various radical cyclizations ring closing metathesis reactions which also can be used to accomplish a specific type of polymerization the Ruzicka large ring synthesis in which two carboxyl groups combine to form a carbonyl group with loss of CO2 and H2O the Wenker synthesis converting a beta amino alcohol to an aziridine other reactions such as an amino group reacting with a hydroxy group as in the biosynthesis of solanineRing opening reactions Edit A variety of further synthetic procedures are particularly useful in opening carbocyclic and other rings generally which contain a double bound or other functional group handle to facilitate chemistry these are termed ring opening reactions Examples include ring opening metathesis which can also be used to accomplish a specific type of polymerization Ring expansion and ring contraction reactions Edit Main article Ring expansion and ring contraction Ring expansion and contraction reactions are common in organic synthesis and are frequently encountered in pericyclic reactions Ring expansions and contractions can involve the insertion of a functional group such as the case with Baeyer Villiger oxidation of cyclic ketones rearrangements of cyclic carbocycles as seen in intramolecular Diels Alder reactions or collapse or rearrangement of bicyclic compounds as several examples Examples EditSimple mono cyclic examples Edit The following are examples of simple and aromatic carbocycles inorganic cyclic compounds and heterocycles Simple mono cyclic compounds Carbocyclic inorganic and heterocyclic aromatic and non aromatic examples Cycloheptane a simple 7 membered carbocyclic compound methylene hydrogens shown non aromatic Benzene a 6 membered carbocyclic compound methine hydrogens shown and 6 electrons shown as delocalized through drawing of circle aromatic Cyclo octasulfur an 8 membered inorganic cyclic compound non aromatic Pentazole a 5 membered inorganic cyclic compound aromatic Azetidine a 4 membered nitrogen aza hetero cyclic compound methylene hydrogen atoms implied not shown non aromatic Pyridine a 6 membered heterocyclic compound methine hydrogen atoms implied not shown and delocalized p electrons shown as discrete bonds aromatic Complex and polycyclic examples Edit The following are examples of cyclic compounds exhibiting more complex ring systems and stereochemical features Complex cyclic compounds Macrocyclic and polycyclic examples Naphthalene technically a polycyclic more specifically a bicyclic compound with circles showing delocalization of p electrons aromatic Decalin decahydronaphthalene the fully saturated derivative of naphthalene showing the two stereochemistries possible for fusing the two rings together and how this impacts the shapes available to this bicyclic compound non aromatic Longifolene a terpene natural product and an example of a tricyclic molecule non aromatic Paclitaxel a polycyclic natural product with a tricyclic core with a heterocyclic 4 membered D ring fused to further 6 and 8 membered carbocyclic A C and B rings non aromatic and with three further pendant phenyl rings on its tail and attached to C 2 abbrev Ph C6H5 aromatics A representative three dimensional shape adopted by paclitaxel as a result of its unique cyclic structure 10 Cholesterol another terpene natural product in particular a steroid a class of tetracyclic molecules non aromatic Benzo a pyrene a pentacyclic compound both natural and man made and delocalized p electrons shown as discrete bonds aromatic Pagodane a complex highly symmetric man made polycyclic compound non aromatic Brevetoxin A a natural product with ten rings all fused and all heterocyclic and a toxic component associated with the organisms responsible for red tides The R group at right refers to one of several possible four carbon side chains see main Brevetoxin article non aromatic See also EditEffective molarity Lactone Open chain compoundReferences Edit March Jerry 1985 Advanced Organic Chemistry Reactions Mechanisms and Structure 3rd ed New York Wiley ISBN 0 471 85472 7 page needed Halduc I 1961 Classification of inorganic cyclic compounds Journal of Structural Chemistry 2 3 350 8 doi 10 1007 BF01141802 S2CID 93804259 Reymond Jean Louis 2015 The Chemical Space Project Accounts of Chemical Research 48 3 722 30 doi 10 1021 ar500432k PMID 25687211 a b c d e f g h William Reusch 2010 Stereoisomers Part I inVirtual Textbook of Organic Chemistry Michigan State University Archived from the original on 10 March 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 a b Still W Clark Galynker Igor 1981 Chemical consequences of conformation in macrocyclic compounds Tetrahedron 37 23 3981 96 doi 10 1016 S0040 4020 01 93273 9 a b J D Dunitz 1968 J D Dunitz and J A Ibers ed Perspectives in Structural Chemistry Vol 2 New York Wiley pp 1 70 Eliel E L Wilen S H and Mander L S 1994 Stereochemistry of Organic Compounds John Wiley and Sons Inc New York page needed Anet F A L St Jacques M Henrichs P M Cheng A K Krane J Wong L 1974 Conformational analysis of medium ring ketones Tetrahedron 30 12 1629 37 doi 10 1016 S0040 4020 01 90685 4 Morris Christopher G Press Academic 1992 Academic Press Dictionary of Science and Technology Gulf Professional Publishing p 120 ISBN 9780122004001 Archived from the original on 2021 04 13 Retrieved 2020 09 14 Lowe J Li H Downing K H Nogales E 2001 Refined structure of ab tubulin at 3 5 A resolution Journal of Molecular Biology 313 5 1045 57 doi 10 1006 jmbi 2001 5077 PMID 11700061 Archived from the original on 2021 01 22 Retrieved 2020 09 14 Further reading EditJurgen Hinrich Fuhrhop amp Gustav Penzlin 1986 Organic synthesis concepts methods starting materials Weinheim BW DEU VCH ISBN 0895732467 see 1 accessed 19 June 2015 Michael B Smith amp Jerry March 2007 March s Advanced Organic Chemistry Reactions Mechanisms and Structure 6th Ed New York NY USA Wiley amp Sons ISBN 0470084944 see 2 accessed 19 June 2015 Francis A Carey amp Richard J Sundberg 2006 Title Advanced Organic Chemistry Part A Structure and Mechanisms 4th Edn New York NY USA Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 0306468565 see 3 accessed 19 June 2015 Michael B Smith 2011 Organic Chemistry An Acid Base Approach Boca Raton FL USA CRC Press ISBN 1420079212 see 4 accessed 19 June 2015 May not be most necessary material for this article but significant content here is available online Jonathan Clayden Nick Greeves amp Stuart Warren 2012 Organic Chemistry Oxford Oxon GBR Oxford University Press ISBN 0199270295 see 5 accessed 19 June 2015 Laszlo Kurti amp Barbara Czako 2005 Strategic Applications of Named Reactions in Organic Synthesis Background and Detailed Mechanisms Amsterdam NH NLD Elsevier Academic Press 2005ISBN 0124297854 see 6 accessed 19 June 2015 External links EditPolycyclic Compounds at the US National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings MeSH Macrocyclic Compounds at the US National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings MeSH Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cyclic compound amp oldid 1134920263 Ring closing reactions, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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