fbpx
Wikipedia

Vinyl cation

The vinyl cation is a carbocation with the positive charge on an alkene carbon. Its empirical formula is C
2
H+
3
. More generally, a vinylic cation is any disubstituted carbon, where the carbon bearing the positive charge is part of a double bond and is sp hybridized. In the chemical literature, substituted vinylic cations are often referred to as vinyl cations, and understood to refer to the broad class rather than the C
2
H+
3
variant alone. The vinyl cation is one of the main types of reactive intermediates involving a non-tetrahedrally coordinated carbon atom, and is necessary to explain a wide variety of observed reactivity trends. Vinyl cations are observed as reactive intermediates in solvolysis reactions,[1][2] as well during electrophilic addition to alkynes,[3] for example, through protonation of an alkyne by a strong acid. As expected from its sp hybridization, the vinyl cation prefers a linear geometry. Compounds related to the vinyl cation include allylic carbocations and benzylic carbocations, as well as aryl carbocations.

Note that unlike the allyl and benzyl carbocations (top left and right, respectively), the electron-deficient carbon of the vinyl carbocation (bottom) is double-bonded.

History edit

Compared to other reactive intermediates such as radicals and carbanions, the vinyl cation long remained poorly-understood[4] and were initially thought to be too high energy to form as reactive intermediates. Vinyl cations were first proposed in 1944 as a reactive intermediate for the acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of alkoxyacetylenes to give alkyl acetate.[5] In the first step of their facile hydration reaction, which was the rate limiting step, a vinyl cation reactive intermediate was proposed; the positive charge was believed to formally lie on a dicoordinate carbon. This is the first time such a transition state can be found in the literature.

It was not until 1959 that this idea was revisited, with Grob and Cseh detecting vinyl cation formation during solvolysis reactions of alpha-vinyl halides in their seminal work.[6] Indeed, for this contribution, Grob has been called “the father of the vinyl cation”.[7] The 1960s saw a flurry of vinyl cation-related research, with kinetics data driving the argument for the existence of the species. Noyce and coworkers, for example, reported the formation of a vinyl cation in acid-catalyzed hydration of phenylpropiolic acid.[8] The authors note that in the rate limiting step, a large positive charge develops on the benzylic carbon, indicating that the reaction proceeds through a vinyl cation transition state. Hyperconjugation and hydrogen bonding was evoked to explain the accessibility of the vinyl cation described by Noyce.

Generation edit

 
Generation of a vinyl cation reactive intermediate. Adapted from [9]

Vinyl cations have been observed as reactive intermediates during solvolysis reactions. Consistent with SN1 chemistry, these reactions follow first order kinetics. Generally, vinylic halides are unreactive in solution: silver nitrate does not precipitate silver halides in the presence of vinyl halides,[10] and this fact was historically used to dispute the existence of the vinyl cation species.[4] The introduction of “super” leaving group in the 1970s first allowed for the generation of vinyl cation reactive intermediates with appreciable lifetimes.[11] These excellent leaving groups, such as triflate (trifluoromethanesulfonate) and nonaflate (nonafluorobutanesulfonate), are highly prone to SN1 reactivity. Utilization of these super leaving groups allowed researchers for the first time to move beyond speculation about the existence of such vinyl cations.

 
Vinyl cation formation through carbon-halogen bond cleavage. Adapted from [12]

Other leaving groups, such as hypervalent iodine moities (which are 1 million fold better leaving groups than the classic triflates[13]), have been utilized to such end as well. Hinkle and coworkers synthesized a number of alkenyl(aryl)iodonium triflates from hypervalent phenyliodo precursors. In the scheme shown, the E- and Z-vinyl triflates form after heterolytic carbon-iodine bond cleavage and subsequent trapping of the cation by triflate. The presence of both E- and Z-vinyl triflate products offers support for the formation of a primary vinyl cation reactive intermediate; through SN2 chemistry, both only one isomer would form.[9]

 
Photoproducts from vinyl iodonium salt. Note: products from possible vinyl cation rearrangement not pictured here. Adapted from [14]

Recently, vinyl cation reactive intermediates have been generated in photochemical solvolysis reactions. The figure to the right depicts photochemical solvolysis of vinyl iodonium salt, through heterolytic carbon-iodine bond cleavage, to generate a vinyl carbocation and[14] iodobenzene. The reactive intermediate is prone to either nucleophilic attack by the solvent to yield E- and Z-enol ether isomers, or beta hydrogen elimination.

Generation of cyclic vinyl cations edit

The ease of generating cyclic vinyl cations depends on the size of the ring system, with vinyl cations residing on smaller rings being more difficult to produce. This trend is supported by calculations showing that the vinyl cation prefers a linear arrangement.[15] Due to the high degree of strain in 3-membered ring systems, the generation of the smallest cyclic vinyl cation, cycloprop-1-enyl cation, remains elusive.[16] The SN1 solvolysis chemistry used to produce other vinyl cations has not proven facile for the cycloprop-1-enyl cation. This is a chemical challenge that remains unsolved.

Structure edit

 
Linear and bridged structure of vinyl cation C
2
H+
3
. Adapted from [17]
 
Resonance structure of β-silyl substituted vinyl cation that exhibits hyperconjugation. The bond angle from the X-ray structure is also noted. Adapted from [17]

The simplest vinyl cation, C
2
H+
3
, which is unsubstituted, can have two possible structures, a classical linear or a non-classical bridged structure. Ab initio calculations have shown that the bridged structure is more stable than the classical by 5.0 kcal/mol.[17] But for substituted vinyl cations with equivalent alkyl groups, the linear structure is supported by 13C and 1H NMR.[18] The first experimental evidence of the linear structure of vinyl cations was the x-ray structure of β-silyl vinyl cations. Using multinuclear NMR spectroscopy, the compound exhibited a single 29Si NMR signal which implies that the two Si are equivalent and delocalize to the carbocation through hyperconjugation. The vinyl cation has an intense IR peak at 1987 cm−1 for the C=C+ stretching. More importantly, the bond angles between the vinyl cation carbons and the first carbon of the alkyl substituted was measured to be approximately 180o.[19]

Stability edit

 
Electron conjugation in arylvinyl cation.

Initially it was believed that the existence of vinyl cations was questionable because of the large energy difference between it and its vinyl precursor. Once it was established that stable vinyl cation intermediates can be attained through the solvolysis of vinyl compounds with good leaving groups like triflate and nonaflate and stabilized by electron-donating groups, a significant amount of progress as taken place and produced a field of stable vinyl cations.

One of the earliest vinyl cations studied had aryl substituents with an electron-donating moiety. Arylvinyl compounds are stabilized by resonance. Upon the removal of the leaving group, the empty p-orbital is perpendicular to the conjugated system of the phenyl ring, so it can only achieve resonance stabilization in its transition state when the vinyl empty p-orbital is coplanar with the p system of the phenyl ring. Adding steric bulk to the ortho-positions improve conjugation as it makes the phenyl ring orthogonal to the vinyl carbons but coplanar with the empty p-orbital.

 
Electron conjugation in dienyl cation. Adapted from [20]
 
Electron conjugation in allenyl cation. Adapted from [20]
 
Structures of cyclopropyl vinyl cation. Top: bisected, bottom: perpendicular. Adapted from [20]

Like arylvinyl cations, dienyl and allenyl cations are also stabilized by conjugation. Once again, double bonds in the conjugated system must be coplanar to the empty p-orbital to achieve resonance stabilization. In allenyl cations, the positive charge is well-distributed across the whole structure.

 
Rearrangement to cyclopropyl stabilized vinyl cation. Adapted from [20]

Cyclopropylvinyl cations exhibit a non-classical approach to stabilization. When it is in its bisected structure, there is suitable overlap between its empty p-orbital and the cyclopropyl ring that stabilization is achieved. In its other form, the perpendicular structure, the empty p-orbital is perpendicular to the ring system. The stabilizing power of the cyclopropyl ring is so great that it has become a driving thermodynamic force in rearrangements like 1,2-hydride shifts in (E)- and (Z)-3-cyclopropyl-2-propenyl triflate solvolysis.[20]

Substituent effects on vinyl cation stability

Substituent Stabilization# Electronic effect from α-substituent
Induction^ π-donation Hyperconjugation
-CH˭CH2 + - +*
-CH3 + +
-Cl + - +*
-Br + - +*
-I + - +*
-F - -* +
-NH2 + - +*
-OH + - +*
-SH + - +*
-C6H5 + +*
-CF3 - -
-CH2F - -
-NO2 - -
-C≡N + - +*
-CH2Y*** + - +*
-Si(CH3)3 + +
-C(O)H - +/-**
-COOH - +/-**
-C(CH3)2OH + -
-C≡CH + - +*

Table 1: Electronic effects responsible for stabilization of vinyl cation at the α-position

^ ‘-’ electron-withdrawing, ‘+’ electron-donating

# ‘+’ indicates stabilization and ‘-‘ indicates destabilization of the substituted vinyl cation with respect to neutral alkene equivalent

*indicates the strongest factor responsible for (de)stabilization for substituents that exhibit more than one electronic effect

** the substituent is inductively withdrawing at the carbonyl carbon and also exhibits small electron delocalization from the carbonyl oxygen

*** Y = -F, -Cl, -Br, -I, -OH, -CN, -CF3

 
Labelling of simple vinyl cation.

The presence of an empty p-orbital perpendicular to the p-bond imparts unwanted destabilization onto the vinyl cation. This inherent instability can be diminished through favorable interactions with a-substituents that reduce the charge at the carbocation. Ab initio computational methods have been used to show stabilizing or destabilizing effects of substituents by monitoring changes in the enthalpies, bond lengths, bond order, and charges in the structures.

 
Electronic effects that stabilize vinyl cations.

There are three possible electronic effects that a substituent may exhibit to influence the stability of the vinyl cation. It may either destabilize the cation by drawing even more electron density from the carbon or stabilizing by contributing more electron density. The carbocation positive charge can be relieved by an unsaturated carbon-based or heteroatomic substituent through p-donation and/or C-H hyperconjugation by methylene/methyl substituents. In addition, inductive effects can either stabilize or destabilizing depending on whether the substituent is electron-donating or –withdrawing. Individual electronic effects are not isolable from the others as all three work together to influence the overall stability of the cation.

 
Isodesmic reaction typically used in energy calculations of vinyl cations.

For vinyl cations, relative stabilities can be compared with respect to their neutral alkene analogs. To obtain the stabilization properties of a-substituents, the isodesmic reaction was used to calculate enthalpy differences between the substituted vinyl cation and its neutral alkene precursor by getting its reaction enthalpy. This method is advantageous as it can be benchmarked against experimentally-determined thermochemical values. Calculations are initialized from the bridged, nonclassical structure of vinyl cations as it is the global minimum.

In a preliminary work, 4 substituents (-CH=CH2, -F, -Cl, -CH3) were initially studied to investigate electronic effects on vinyl cation stability. Different a-substituents induces structural changes in the vinyl cation when compared to its neutral alkene counterpart. These changes can be attributed to the electronic effects present. In vinyl cations, there is a marked decrease in the C-R and C=C bond lengths, indicative of electron donation or induction between Ca and R, and Cb and Ca. On the other hand, the increase in the Cb-H bond length implies a strong hyperconjugative effect that is inversely related to the thermodynamic stability of the cation. Stabilization is possible because of a good overlap between the C-H bond and the empty p-orbital at Ca. Hyperconjugation is evident in all structures because of the adjacent Cb-H bond and in the –CH3 substituent.

Enthalpy calculations obtained from the isodesmic reaction are fair accurate and shows good correlation with experimental data. Stabilization is ranked the order, -F < -Cl < -CH3 < -CH=CH2. All substituents impart stability except for fluorine which destabilized the vinyl cation by 7 kcal/mole. This phenomenon can be explained by comparing a-fluorine substituent effects on vinyl and ethyl cations. In ethyl cations, fluorine stabilizes the carbocation. The stark difference in the stabilizing capabilities of fluorine in the vinyl and ethyl cation is due to the difference in the hybridization of the a-carbons. Because the vinyl cation has a more electronegative sp-hybridized carbon, inductive effects will be more prominent. Having electronegative sp-hybridized carbon interact with fluorine significantly destabilizes the structure. This phenomenon is also apparent in a lesser extent when comparing –CH3 and –CH=CH2 substituents, where -CH=CH2 is less stabilizing.

Heteroatoms like fluorine and chlorine, can exhibit both inductive (electron-withdrawing) and p-donation electronic effects because of their high electronegativities and p-electrons. Stabilization then depends on the balance between the two electronic effects. For fluorine, destabilization via induction is dominant and resonance is significantly weaker. While for chlorine, resonance is sufficient to counteract induction so that overall the effect is stabilizing.

For inductively withdrawing/donating and p-donating substituents, some partial charges reside in the R group and Ca. Although the trend in charge magnitude in R and Ca for the four substituents are inversely related. It is also observed that there is an increase in the bond order of Cb=Ca and Ca-R, which is consistent with the corresponding changes in bond length.

In the small sample size of substituents, there was no observed correlation between bond order increase and charge distribution to R, and the stabilization due to the substituent. However, stabilization has exhibited a correlation to Cb-H bond elongation.

Based on the mechanisms provided above, a wide array of vinyl cation a-substituents can be classified according to the electronic effects they exhibit and the extent of stabilization would depend on the delicate balance between these effects.

Lone pair-containing substituents like –NH2, -OH, and –SH are stabilizing since p-donation overcomes inductively withdrawing effects. Conjugated systems like –CH=CH2 and –C6H5 are stabilizing due to strong p-donation. Highly destabilizing substituents like –CF3 and –NO2 only exhibit inductive electron withdrawal. Weakly destabilizing substituents like –CN has a weak p-donation effect that does not completely curb induction by electron withdrawal.

It is not entirely plausible to isolate the inductive effect of heteroatomic a-substituents because other electronic effects get in the way. However, one way inductive effects of functional groups can be investigated is by probing b-substituent effects where the heteroatom would be a methylene group away from the vinyl cation (-CH2Y). In –CH2Y groups that exhibit a very small or no p donation, there is only a very small difference in the hyperconjugative effect in the –CH2- groups of the substituents. Hence, the overall stability can be correlated to the b-substituent effect, now only driven by its inductive power. Comparing only purely inductively capabilities of functional groups the order is: CN > CF3 > F > Cl > Br > OH, with some destabilization energies comparable to a methyl group.

In most cases, substituents exhibit more than one electronic (de)stabilization effect. Usually, the inductive effect brought upon by multiple bonds to a heteroatom can be counterbalanced by p donation from the same heteroatom. For instance, based on absolute b-inductive power, -CN is more inductive than CF3, but since there can be p donation from the nitrogen of CN, its inductive capability is reduced. In common heteroatomic substituents like F, Cl, Br, and OH, the stabilization decreases with higher electron-withdrawing ability. However, p donation is still believed to take place because of C-R bond decrease.

Carbonyl substituents are mainly destabilizing because of the highly partially positive carbonyl carbon beside the vinyl cation and no p donation.

It is useful to compare substituent effects of vinyl cations and ethyl cations to investigate the hybridization effects of stabilization. In general, vinyl cations are more stabilized by substituents compared ethyl cations primarily because vinyl cations are inherently less stable to begin with. For strongly inductively electron-withdrawing groups like –F, -OH, and –NH2, inductive destabilization is more apparent in vinyl compared to ethyl cations because of the highly electronegative nature of vinyl cation sp hybrids compared to ethyl cation sp2 hybrids. In contrast, in the case of an α-Si(CH3)3 substituent, it is more stabilizing to vinyl cations because it has no p-electrons.

In terms of bond order, stabilizing substituents result in an increase in the C-R, Cα=Cβ, and Cβ-H bond orders. Small increases in bond orders are observed in –CF3, -CH2F, and –CH2X, where they are incapable of p donation, while large increases in bond orders are observed in substituents that can donate p or p electrons like –CH=CH2, -I, or –SH. [21][22]

Vinyl cation intermediates in chemical reactions edit

Electrophilic additions edit

 
General scheme for electrophilic attack on acetylene. Adapted from [23]
 
Acid-catalyzed hydration of alkynes through vinyl cation intermediate. Adapted from [23]

A vinyl cation intermediate is possibly formed when electrophilic moieties attack unsaturated carbons. This can be achieved in the reaction of electrophiles with alkynes or allenes. In these reactions, a positive electrophile attacks one of the unsaturated carbons that then forms a vinyl cation, which subsequently undergoes further reaction steps to form the final product.

In the acid-catalyzed hydration of arylacetylene derivatives, a proton initially attacks the triple bond to form a vinyl cation at the aryl substituted carbon. The intermediate experiences little resonance stabilization because of the orthogonality of the conjugated aryl orbital with the empty p-orbital of the vinyl cation. The reaction is first order with respect to both the acetylene and the proton and with the protonation of the acetylene as the rate-determining step. Monosubstituted aryl/alkoxyacetylenes exhibit faster kinetics in acidic hydrations compared to its methyl-substituted equivalents. In arylacetylenes, methyl groups appear to contribute less stabilization compared to hydrogens because of C-H hyperconjugation, reversing the stabilization trend observed in alkyl cations. C-H hyperconjugation is a significant factor because the C-H bond can significantly overlap with the vacant p-orbital. Another possible explanation is that smaller size of the hydrogen substituent allows solvation to take place more easily contributing more significant stabilization.

Aside from protons, other electrophilic groups can attack an acetylene moiety. When attacked by carboxylic acids, cis/trans alkene adducts may be formed. The reaction with hydrogen halides, which also has an initial protonation step, results in the formation of halo-substituted alkenes. Lastly, adamantyl ketones may be formed from an adamantyl cation attack on acetylene and subsequent hydration.[24]

 
Thermodynamic and kinetic controlled products of hydrohalogenation of alkynes through vinyl cation intermediate. Adapted from [25]

In the hydrohalogenation of phenylpropene, two different alkene products are formed because of thermodynamic and kinetic effects. The linear sp-hybridized vinyl cation may be attacked by the halogen from two different directions. When attacked from the less sterically hindered side (hydrogen), the E-alkene is produced, attack to the other side forms the Z-alkene. Over short time scales, the E-alkene is favored because the attack from the less bulky side is preferred, but over longer times, the more stable (bulky methyl and phenyl groups on opposite sides) Z-alkene is preferred. Though the E-alkene is initially formed, it isomerizes to the Z-alkene through a carbocation intermediate the stems from protonation and C-C rotation steps.[25]

 
Hydroxyl neighboring group effect on vinyl cations. Adapted from [23]
 
Terminal chlorine neighboring group effect on 1-pentyne. Adapted from

Neighboring groups surround the alkyne can enhance reaction kinetics by interacting with the intermediate via nonclassical approaches like intramolecular interactions. An alkyne that is adjacent to a tertiary alcohol forms a four-membered cyclic vinyl cation intermediate in which the oxygen of the hydroxyl group bridges two carbons across two bonds. Likewise, a five-membered chloronium ring intermediate is formed from 5-chloro substituted 1-pentynes. An unusually shifted product is formed because the intermediate undergoes heterolysis at the C5-Cl position.[24]

 
Electrophilic attack to allene groups. Adapted from

In the electrophilic attack of allenes, it takes place in a manner that prefers to form a terminal adduct and the vinyl cation at the central carbon. The polarization of the allene group show that the terminal carbons have a higher electron density and tendency to under nucleophilic attack. However, if the terminal end is stabilized by a substituent, an allyl-like cation may form as the electrophile attacks the central carbon. Similar to phenyl rings adjacent to vinyl cations, there must be bond rotation to achieve complete resonance stabilization.[24]

Rearrangements edit

 
Major types of rearrangements in vinyl cations. Adapted from [18]

Vinyl cations intermediates that are formed during reactions can have a tendency to undergo rearrangements. These rearrangements can be broadly categorized into two classes: migrations into double bonds and rearrangements via the double bonds. The first category involves 1,2-shifts that lead to the formation of an allyl cation, while the second type involves the formation of another vinyl cation isomer.

 
1,2-Hydride shift in vinyl cation. Adapted from [18]
 
Orbital interactions in vinyl cation to allyl cation rearrangement. Adapted from [18]

Vinyl cations undergo 1,2-hydride shifts to form an allyl-stabilized cation. 1,2-Hydride shifts are fairly common in alkyl cations and is fast in the NMR time scale. However, in vinyl cations, this rearrangement is uncommon even though the rearrangement product in thermodynamically stable. Much like the aryl-substituted vinyl cations, the interacting orbitals during the conversion of a linear vinyl cation to a non-linear allyl cation are orthogonal and passes through a non-planar transition state, which makes the rearrangement difficult. This is evident in the higher activation energies of 1,2-hydride shifts in vinyl cations compared to alkyl cations. Examples of reactions in which this is observed would be the protonation of dialkyl-substituted alkynes and in the solvolysis of ispropylvinyl trifluromethanesulfonate in trifluoroethanol.

 
1,2-Methyl and 1,2-hydride shift in the same vinyl cation. Adapted from [18]
 
1,2-methyl shift in tert-butyl substituted vinyl cation. Adapted from [18]
 
1,2-methyl shift in cyclic vinyl cation. Adapted from [18]

1,2-Methyl shifts also occurs in vinyl cations, and like 1,2-hydride shifts, they have higher activation barriers compared to their alkyl cation equivalents. In the protonation of alkynes, both 1,2-hydride and 1,2-methyl shifts may take place. The preference depends on the alkyl substituent since it will dictate the resulting allyl cation product. For t-butyl substituents, 1,2-methyl shifts are preferred, and for isopropyl substituents, 1,2-hydride shifts occur instead. Cyclic alkenes also exhibit 1,2-methyl shifts upon solvolysis.

 
Alkyl shifts in vinyl cation that leads to changes in cyclic system. Adapted from [18]

In the solvolysis of spiro-vinyl triflate, the formation of a vinyl cation intermediate through a concerted process drives further rearrangements that involve the formation of a completely different cyclic structure. Ring expansion can also be achieved through the rearrangement of a vinyl cation.

 
1,2-hydride shift in vinyl cation to form another vinyl cation isomer. Adapted from [18]

The second class of rearrangements, the vinyl cation rearranges to form another vinyl cation isomer. The process is highly dependent on the solvent, nature of the nucleophile, and moieties in the compound. In primary vinyl cations, a 1,2-hydride is unlikely because of the low stability of the primary vinyl cation because of the low electron-donating capability of hydrogen. However, this is still observed in special cases like in 1-methyl-2-phenylvinyl triflate, where the resulting vinyl cation is resonance-stabilized.

 
Halogen shift in vinyl cation. Adapted from [18]
 
Methyl shifts to the vinyl cation. Adapted from [18]

Methyl shifts are observed in the addition of tert-butyl cation to but-2-yne. The pentaallyl cation that is formed could be the result of a single 1,3-methyl shift or two consecutive 1,2-methyl shifts. Rearrangement via the double bond could also change the size of a cyclic system. In the solvolysis of methyl-substituted cyclohexenyl triflate, the rearrangement and non-rearranged product are formed in almost equal amounts, with a small preference to the rearrangement product because of its linear structure. However, it must be noted that there is some strain in the methylenecyclopentane rearrangement product.

Lastly, halogens could also move into and stabilize a vinyl cation system. In the reaction of 5-chloropent-1-yne with trifluoroacetic acid, there is simultaneous protonation and 1,4-shift of chlorine that forms a bridged cyclic structure across four carbons. Trifluoroacetic acid subsequently attacks the intermediate from the terminal end to form 2-chloropent-4-enyl trifluoroacetate. This phenomenon is also observed in other halogens. For instance, fluoroalkynes can form a product with two adducts.[18]

Vinyl cations in pericyclic reactions edit

 
Vinyl cation intermediates in pericyclic reactions. Adapted from [26]

Ketenes and allenes undergo [2+2] cycloadditions under thermal conditions in a concerted manner because they have pi orbitals that are orthogonal to each other. Vinyl cation intermediates undergo the same process in the same manner because it has 2 p orbitals that can simultaneously overlap with the orbitals of the dienophile. In the Smirnov-Zamkow reaction between 2-butyne and Cl2, a cycloaddition leads to the formation of dichlorocyclobutane. A similar reaction is also observed when allene is reacted with HCl. After the cycloaddition, a cationic cyclic intermediate is formed and then it is attacked by a nucleophile to form the final product.[26]

Vinyl cations in hydrohalogenation edit

There is debate on whether a vinyl cation intermediate forms with the addition of a halide (H-X) compound to a terminal alkyne for hydrohalogenation reactions. Alternatively, some believe that the addition of H and Br in this case is actually concerted.[citation needed]

References edit

  1. ^ Okuyama, T. (2002). "Solvolysis of Vinyl Iodonium Salts. New Insights into Vinyl Cation Intermediates". Acc. Chem. Res. 35 (1): 12. doi:10.1021/ar0100374.
  2. ^ Gronheid, R (2001). "Thermal and Photochemical Solvolysis of (E)- and (Z)-2-Phenyl-1-Propenyl(phenyl)iodonium Tetrafluoroborate: Benzenium and Primary Vinylic Cation Intermediates". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 123 (36): 8760. doi:10.1021/ja010861n.
  3. ^ Walkinshaw, Andrew J.; Xu, Wenshu; Suero, Marcos G.; Gaunt, Matthew J. (2013). "Copper-Catalyzed Carboarylation of Alkynes via Vinyl Cations". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 135 (34): 12532–12535. doi:10.1021/ja405972h. PMID 23947578.
  4. ^ a b Stang, P.J. (1979). Vinyl Cations. New York: Academic Press. p. 2.
  5. ^ Jacobs, Thomas L.; Searles, Scott (1944-05-01). "Acetylenic Ethers. IV.1 Hydration". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 66 (5): 686–689. doi:10.1021/ja01233a007. ISSN 0002-7863.
  6. ^ Grob, C.A. (1964). "Die Solvoltische Decarboxylierung von α,β-Ungesättigeten β-Halogensäuren Fragmentierungsreaktionen, 9. Miteilung". Helv. Chim. Acta. 47 (6): 1590. doi:10.1002/hlca.19640470621.
  7. ^ Miyamoto, K. (2009). "Facile Generation of a Strained Cyclic Vinyl Cation by Thermal Solvolysis of Cyclopent-1-Enyl-λ3-Bromanes". Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 48 (47): 8931–4. doi:10.1002/anie.200903368. PMID 19830754.
  8. ^ Noyce, D. (1965). "Concerning the Acid-Catalyzed Hydration of Acetylenes". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 87 (10): 2295. doi:10.1021/ja01088a042.
  9. ^ a b Hinkle, R.J. (1999). "Primary Vinyl Cations in Solution: Kinetics and Products of a,a-Disubstituted Alkenyl(aryl)iodonium Triflate Fragmentations". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 121 (32): 7437–7438. doi:10.1021/ja9916310.
  10. ^ Shriner, R.L. (1964). Systematic Identification of Organic Compounds. New York: Wiley.
  11. ^ Hanack, Michael (1970-07-01). "Vinyl cations in solvolysis reactions". Accounts of Chemical Research. 3 (7): 209–216. doi:10.1021/ar50031a001. ISSN 0001-4842.
  12. ^ Stang, P.J. (1979). Vinyl Cations. New York: Academic Press. p. 213.
  13. ^ Okuyama, Tadashi; Takino, Tomoki; Sueda, Takuya; Ochiai, Masahito (1995-03-01). "Solvolysis of Cyclohexenyliodonium Salt, a New Precursor for the Vinyl Cation: Remarkable Nucleofugality of the Phenyliodonio Group and Evidence for Internal Return from an Intimate Ion-Molecule Pair". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 117 (12): 3360–3367. doi:10.1021/ja00117a006. ISSN 0002-7863.
  14. ^ a b Tidwell, Thomas T.; P.), Richard, J. P. (John (2003-01-01). Advances in physical organic chemistry. Vol. 37. Academic. ISBN 978-0120335374. OCLC 51840423.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ Mayr, Herbert; Schneider, Reinhard; Wilhelm, Dieter; Schleyer, Paul V. R. (1981-12-01). "Vinyl cations. Comparison of gas-phase thermodynamic and solvolysis data with ab initio MO calculations" (PDF). The Journal of Organic Chemistry. 46 (26): 5336–5340. doi:10.1021/jo00339a015. ISSN 0022-3263.
  16. ^ Grob, C. A.; Csapilla, J.; Cseh, G. (1964-01-01). "Die solvoltische Decarboxylierung von α,β-ungesättigeten β-Halogensäuren Fragmentierungsreaktionen, 9. Miteilung". Helvetica Chimica Acta. 47 (6): 1590–1602. doi:10.1002/hlca.19640470621. ISSN 1522-2675.
  17. ^ a b c Pople, J.A. (1987). "The structure of the vinyl cation". Chemical Physics Letters. 137 (1): 10–12. Bibcode:1987CPL...137...10P. doi:10.1016/0009-2614(87)80294-4.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Shchegolev, A A; Kanishchev, M I (1981). "Rearrangements in Vinyl Cations". Russian Chemical Reviews. 50 (6): 553–564. Bibcode:1981RuCRv..50..553S. doi:10.1070/rc1981v050n06abeh002650.
  19. ^ Müller, Thomas; Juhasz, Mark; Reed, Christopher A. (2004-03-12). "The X-ray Structure of a Vinyl Cation" (PDF). Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 43 (12): 1543–1546. doi:10.1002/anie.200352986. ISSN 1521-3773. PMID 15022228.
  20. ^ a b c d e Hanack, Michael (1976-10-01). "Stabilized vinyl cations". Accounts of Chemical Research. 9 (10): 364–371. doi:10.1021/ar50106a004. ISSN 0001-4842.
  21. ^ van Alem, Kaj; Lodder, Gerrit; Zuilhof, Han (2000-03-01). "α-Substituted Vinyl Cations: Stabilities and Electronic Properties". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 104 (12): 2780–2787. Bibcode:2000JPCA..104.2780V. doi:10.1021/jp9935743. ISSN 1089-5639.
  22. ^ van Alem, Kaj; Lodder, Gerrit; Zuilhof, Han (2002-11-01). "Delocalization Does Not Always Stabilize: A Quantum Chemical Analysis of α-Substituent Effects on 54 Alkyl and Vinyl Cations". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 106 (44): 10681–10690. Bibcode:2002JPCA..10610681V. doi:10.1021/jp021766j. ISSN 1089-5639.
  23. ^ a b c Advances in Physical Organic Chemistry. Academic Press. 1971-12-31. p. 185. ISBN 9780080581484. vinyl cation advances in physical organic chemistry modena.
  24. ^ a b c Modena, Giorgio (1971). "Vinyl cations". Advances in Physical Organic Chemistry. 9: 185–280.
  25. ^ a b Organic Chemistry (Second ed.). Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. 2012-05-04. ISBN 9780199270293.
  26. ^ a b Fleming, Ian (2010). Molecular Orbitals and Organic Chemical Reactions, Reference Edition - Fleming - Wiley Online Library. doi:10.1002/9780470689493. ISBN 9780470689493.

vinyl, cation, functional, group, general, vinyl, group, other, uses, vinyl, vinyl, cation, carbocation, with, positive, charge, alkene, carbon, empirical, formula, more, generally, vinylic, cation, disubstituted, carbon, where, carbon, bearing, positive, char. For the functional group in general see Vinyl group For other uses see Vinyl The vinyl cation is a carbocation with the positive charge on an alkene carbon Its empirical formula is C2 H 3 More generally a vinylic cation is any disubstituted carbon where the carbon bearing the positive charge is part of a double bond and is sp hybridized In the chemical literature substituted vinylic cations are often referred to as vinyl cations and understood to refer to the broad class rather than the C2 H 3 variant alone The vinyl cation is one of the main types of reactive intermediates involving a non tetrahedrally coordinated carbon atom and is necessary to explain a wide variety of observed reactivity trends Vinyl cations are observed as reactive intermediates in solvolysis reactions 1 2 as well during electrophilic addition to alkynes 3 for example through protonation of an alkyne by a strong acid As expected from its sp hybridization the vinyl cation prefers a linear geometry Compounds related to the vinyl cation include allylic carbocations and benzylic carbocations as well as aryl carbocations Note that unlike the allyl and benzyl carbocations top left and right respectively the electron deficient carbon of the vinyl carbocation bottom is double bonded Contents 1 History 2 Generation 2 1 Generation of cyclic vinyl cations 3 Structure 4 Stability 5 Vinyl cation intermediates in chemical reactions 5 1 Electrophilic additions 5 2 Rearrangements 5 3 Vinyl cations in pericyclic reactions 5 4 Vinyl cations in hydrohalogenation 6 ReferencesHistory editCompared to other reactive intermediates such as radicals and carbanions the vinyl cation long remained poorly understood 4 and were initially thought to be too high energy to form as reactive intermediates Vinyl cations were first proposed in 1944 as a reactive intermediate for the acid catalyzed hydrolysis of alkoxyacetylenes to give alkyl acetate 5 In the first step of their facile hydration reaction which was the rate limiting step a vinyl cation reactive intermediate was proposed the positive charge was believed to formally lie on a dicoordinate carbon This is the first time such a transition state can be found in the literature It was not until 1959 that this idea was revisited with Grob and Cseh detecting vinyl cation formation during solvolysis reactions of alpha vinyl halides in their seminal work 6 Indeed for this contribution Grob has been called the father of the vinyl cation 7 The 1960s saw a flurry of vinyl cation related research with kinetics data driving the argument for the existence of the species Noyce and coworkers for example reported the formation of a vinyl cation in acid catalyzed hydration of phenylpropiolic acid 8 The authors note that in the rate limiting step a large positive charge develops on the benzylic carbon indicating that the reaction proceeds through a vinyl cation transition state Hyperconjugation and hydrogen bonding was evoked to explain the accessibility of the vinyl cation described by Noyce Generation edit nbsp Generation of a vinyl cation reactive intermediate Adapted from 9 Vinyl cations have been observed as reactive intermediates during solvolysis reactions Consistent with SN1 chemistry these reactions follow first order kinetics Generally vinylic halides are unreactive in solution silver nitrate does not precipitate silver halides in the presence of vinyl halides 10 and this fact was historically used to dispute the existence of the vinyl cation species 4 The introduction of super leaving group in the 1970s first allowed for the generation of vinyl cation reactive intermediates with appreciable lifetimes 11 These excellent leaving groups such as triflate trifluoromethanesulfonate and nonaflate nonafluorobutanesulfonate are highly prone to SN1 reactivity Utilization of these super leaving groups allowed researchers for the first time to move beyond speculation about the existence of such vinyl cations nbsp Vinyl cation formation through carbon halogen bond cleavage Adapted from 12 Other leaving groups such as hypervalent iodine moities which are 1 million fold better leaving groups than the classic triflates 13 have been utilized to such end as well Hinkle and coworkers synthesized a number of alkenyl aryl iodonium triflates from hypervalent phenyliodo precursors In the scheme shown the E and Z vinyl triflates form after heterolytic carbon iodine bond cleavage and subsequent trapping of the cation by triflate The presence of both E and Z vinyl triflate products offers support for the formation of a primary vinyl cation reactive intermediate through SN2 chemistry both only one isomer would form 9 nbsp Photoproducts from vinyl iodonium salt Note products from possible vinyl cation rearrangement not pictured here Adapted from 14 Recently vinyl cation reactive intermediates have been generated in photochemical solvolysis reactions The figure to the right depicts photochemical solvolysis of vinyl iodonium salt through heterolytic carbon iodine bond cleavage to generate a vinyl carbocation and 14 iodobenzene The reactive intermediate is prone to either nucleophilic attack by the solvent to yield E and Z enol ether isomers or beta hydrogen elimination Generation of cyclic vinyl cations edit The ease of generating cyclic vinyl cations depends on the size of the ring system with vinyl cations residing on smaller rings being more difficult to produce This trend is supported by calculations showing that the vinyl cation prefers a linear arrangement 15 Due to the high degree of strain in 3 membered ring systems the generation of the smallest cyclic vinyl cation cycloprop 1 enyl cation remains elusive 16 The SN1 solvolysis chemistry used to produce other vinyl cations has not proven facile for the cycloprop 1 enyl cation This is a chemical challenge that remains unsolved Structure edit nbsp Linear and bridged structure of vinyl cation C2 H 3 Adapted from 17 nbsp Resonance structure of b silyl substituted vinyl cation that exhibits hyperconjugation The bond angle from the X ray structure is also noted Adapted from 17 The simplest vinyl cation C2 H 3 which is unsubstituted can have two possible structures a classical linear or a non classical bridged structure Ab initio calculations have shown that the bridged structure is more stable than the classical by 5 0 kcal mol 17 But for substituted vinyl cations with equivalent alkyl groups the linear structure is supported by 13C and 1H NMR 18 The first experimental evidence of the linear structure of vinyl cations was the x ray structure of b silyl vinyl cations Using multinuclear NMR spectroscopy the compound exhibited a single 29Si NMR signal which implies that the two Si are equivalent and delocalize to the carbocation through hyperconjugation The vinyl cation has an intense IR peak at 1987 cm 1 for the C C stretching More importantly the bond angles between the vinyl cation carbons and the first carbon of the alkyl substituted was measured to be approximately 180o 19 Stability edit nbsp Electron conjugation in arylvinyl cation Initially it was believed that the existence of vinyl cations was questionable because of the large energy difference between it and its vinyl precursor Once it was established that stable vinyl cation intermediates can be attained through the solvolysis of vinyl compounds with good leaving groups like triflate and nonaflate and stabilized by electron donating groups a significant amount of progress as taken place and produced a field of stable vinyl cations One of the earliest vinyl cations studied had aryl substituents with an electron donating moiety Arylvinyl compounds are stabilized by resonance Upon the removal of the leaving group the empty p orbital is perpendicular to the conjugated system of the phenyl ring so it can only achieve resonance stabilization in its transition state when the vinyl empty p orbital is coplanar with the p system of the phenyl ring Adding steric bulk to the ortho positions improve conjugation as it makes the phenyl ring orthogonal to the vinyl carbons but coplanar with the empty p orbital nbsp Electron conjugation in dienyl cation Adapted from 20 nbsp Electron conjugation in allenyl cation Adapted from 20 nbsp Structures of cyclopropyl vinyl cation Top bisected bottom perpendicular Adapted from 20 Like arylvinyl cations dienyl and allenyl cations are also stabilized by conjugation Once again double bonds in the conjugated system must be coplanar to the empty p orbital to achieve resonance stabilization In allenyl cations the positive charge is well distributed across the whole structure nbsp Rearrangement to cyclopropyl stabilized vinyl cation Adapted from 20 Cyclopropylvinyl cations exhibit a non classical approach to stabilization When it is in its bisected structure there is suitable overlap between its empty p orbital and the cyclopropyl ring that stabilization is achieved In its other form the perpendicular structure the empty p orbital is perpendicular to the ring system The stabilizing power of the cyclopropyl ring is so great that it has become a driving thermodynamic force in rearrangements like 1 2 hydride shifts in E and Z 3 cyclopropyl 2 propenyl triflate solvolysis 20 Substituent effects on vinyl cation stability Substituent Stabilization Electronic effect from a substituentInduction p donation Hyperconjugation CH CH2 CH3 Cl Br I F NH2 OH SH C6H5 CF3 CH2F NO2 C N CH2Y Si CH3 3 C O H COOH C CH3 2OH C CH Table 1 Electronic effects responsible for stabilization of vinyl cation at the a position electron withdrawing electron donating indicates stabilization and indicates destabilization of the substituted vinyl cation with respect to neutral alkene equivalent indicates the strongest factor responsible for de stabilization for substituents that exhibit more than one electronic effect the substituent is inductively withdrawing at the carbonyl carbon and also exhibits small electron delocalization from the carbonyl oxygen Y F Cl Br I OH CN CF3 nbsp Labelling of simple vinyl cation The presence of an empty p orbital perpendicular to the p bond imparts unwanted destabilization onto the vinyl cation This inherent instability can be diminished through favorable interactions with a substituents that reduce the charge at the carbocation Ab initio computational methods have been used to show stabilizing or destabilizing effects of substituents by monitoring changes in the enthalpies bond lengths bond order and charges in the structures nbsp Electronic effects that stabilize vinyl cations There are three possible electronic effects that a substituent may exhibit to influence the stability of the vinyl cation It may either destabilize the cation by drawing even more electron density from the carbon or stabilizing by contributing more electron density The carbocation positive charge can be relieved by an unsaturated carbon based or heteroatomic substituent through p donation and or C H hyperconjugation by methylene methyl substituents In addition inductive effects can either stabilize or destabilizing depending on whether the substituent is electron donating or withdrawing Individual electronic effects are not isolable from the others as all three work together to influence the overall stability of the cation nbsp Isodesmic reaction typically used in energy calculations of vinyl cations For vinyl cations relative stabilities can be compared with respect to their neutral alkene analogs To obtain the stabilization properties of a substituents the isodesmic reaction was used to calculate enthalpy differences between the substituted vinyl cation and its neutral alkene precursor by getting its reaction enthalpy This method is advantageous as it can be benchmarked against experimentally determined thermochemical values Calculations are initialized from the bridged nonclassical structure of vinyl cations as it is the global minimum In a preliminary work 4 substituents CH CH2 F Cl CH3 were initially studied to investigate electronic effects on vinyl cation stability Different a substituents induces structural changes in the vinyl cation when compared to its neutral alkene counterpart These changes can be attributed to the electronic effects present In vinyl cations there is a marked decrease in the C R and C C bond lengths indicative of electron donation or induction between Ca and R and Cb and Ca On the other hand the increase in the Cb H bond length implies a strong hyperconjugative effect that is inversely related to the thermodynamic stability of the cation Stabilization is possible because of a good overlap between the C H bond and the empty p orbital at Ca Hyperconjugation is evident in all structures because of the adjacent Cb H bond and in the CH3 substituent Enthalpy calculations obtained from the isodesmic reaction are fair accurate and shows good correlation with experimental data Stabilization is ranked the order F lt Cl lt CH3 lt CH CH2 All substituents impart stability except for fluorine which destabilized the vinyl cation by 7 kcal mole This phenomenon can be explained by comparing a fluorine substituent effects on vinyl and ethyl cations In ethyl cations fluorine stabilizes the carbocation The stark difference in the stabilizing capabilities of fluorine in the vinyl and ethyl cation is due to the difference in the hybridization of the a carbons Because the vinyl cation has a more electronegative sp hybridized carbon inductive effects will be more prominent Having electronegative sp hybridized carbon interact with fluorine significantly destabilizes the structure This phenomenon is also apparent in a lesser extent when comparing CH3 and CH CH2 substituents where CH CH2 is less stabilizing Heteroatoms like fluorine and chlorine can exhibit both inductive electron withdrawing and p donation electronic effects because of their high electronegativities and p electrons Stabilization then depends on the balance between the two electronic effects For fluorine destabilization via induction is dominant and resonance is significantly weaker While for chlorine resonance is sufficient to counteract induction so that overall the effect is stabilizing For inductively withdrawing donating and p donating substituents some partial charges reside in the R group and Ca Although the trend in charge magnitude in R and Ca for the four substituents are inversely related It is also observed that there is an increase in the bond order of Cb Ca and Ca R which is consistent with the corresponding changes in bond length In the small sample size of substituents there was no observed correlation between bond order increase and charge distribution to R and the stabilization due to the substituent However stabilization has exhibited a correlation to Cb H bond elongation Based on the mechanisms provided above a wide array of vinyl cation a substituents can be classified according to the electronic effects they exhibit and the extent of stabilization would depend on the delicate balance between these effects Lone pair containing substituents like NH2 OH and SH are stabilizing since p donation overcomes inductively withdrawing effects Conjugated systems like CH CH2 and C6H5 are stabilizing due to strong p donation Highly destabilizing substituents like CF3 and NO2 only exhibit inductive electron withdrawal Weakly destabilizing substituents like CN has a weak p donation effect that does not completely curb induction by electron withdrawal It is not entirely plausible to isolate the inductive effect of heteroatomic a substituents because other electronic effects get in the way However one way inductive effects of functional groups can be investigated is by probing b substituent effects where the heteroatom would be a methylene group away from the vinyl cation CH2Y In CH2Y groups that exhibit a very small or no p donation there is only a very small difference in the hyperconjugative effect in the CH2 groups of the substituents Hence the overall stability can be correlated to the b substituent effect now only driven by its inductive power Comparing only purely inductively capabilities of functional groups the order is CN gt CF3 gt F gt Cl gt Br gt OH with some destabilization energies comparable to a methyl group In most cases substituents exhibit more than one electronic de stabilization effect Usually the inductive effect brought upon by multiple bonds to a heteroatom can be counterbalanced by p donation from the same heteroatom For instance based on absolute b inductive power CN is more inductive than CF3 but since there can be p donation from the nitrogen of CN its inductive capability is reduced In common heteroatomic substituents like F Cl Br and OH the stabilization decreases with higher electron withdrawing ability However p donation is still believed to take place because of C R bond decrease Carbonyl substituents are mainly destabilizing because of the highly partially positive carbonyl carbon beside the vinyl cation and no p donation It is useful to compare substituent effects of vinyl cations and ethyl cations to investigate the hybridization effects of stabilization In general vinyl cations are more stabilized by substituents compared ethyl cations primarily because vinyl cations are inherently less stable to begin with For strongly inductively electron withdrawing groups like F OH and NH2 inductive destabilization is more apparent in vinyl compared to ethyl cations because of the highly electronegative nature of vinyl cation sp hybrids compared to ethyl cation sp2 hybrids In contrast in the case of an a Si CH3 3 substituent it is more stabilizing to vinyl cations because it has no p electrons In terms of bond order stabilizing substituents result in an increase in the C R Ca Cb and Cb H bond orders Small increases in bond orders are observed in CF3 CH2F and CH2X where they are incapable of p donation while large increases in bond orders are observed in substituents that can donate p or p electrons like CH CH2 I or SH 21 22 Vinyl cation intermediates in chemical reactions editElectrophilic additions edit nbsp General scheme for electrophilic attack on acetylene Adapted from 23 nbsp Acid catalyzed hydration of alkynes through vinyl cation intermediate Adapted from 23 A vinyl cation intermediate is possibly formed when electrophilic moieties attack unsaturated carbons This can be achieved in the reaction of electrophiles with alkynes or allenes In these reactions a positive electrophile attacks one of the unsaturated carbons that then forms a vinyl cation which subsequently undergoes further reaction steps to form the final product In the acid catalyzed hydration of arylacetylene derivatives a proton initially attacks the triple bond to form a vinyl cation at the aryl substituted carbon The intermediate experiences little resonance stabilization because of the orthogonality of the conjugated aryl orbital with the empty p orbital of the vinyl cation The reaction is first order with respect to both the acetylene and the proton and with the protonation of the acetylene as the rate determining step Monosubstituted aryl alkoxyacetylenes exhibit faster kinetics in acidic hydrations compared to its methyl substituted equivalents In arylacetylenes methyl groups appear to contribute less stabilization compared to hydrogens because of C H hyperconjugation reversing the stabilization trend observed in alkyl cations C H hyperconjugation is a significant factor because the C H bond can significantly overlap with the vacant p orbital Another possible explanation is that smaller size of the hydrogen substituent allows solvation to take place more easily contributing more significant stabilization Aside from protons other electrophilic groups can attack an acetylene moiety When attacked by carboxylic acids cis trans alkene adducts may be formed The reaction with hydrogen halides which also has an initial protonation step results in the formation of halo substituted alkenes Lastly adamantyl ketones may be formed from an adamantyl cation attack on acetylene and subsequent hydration 24 nbsp Thermodynamic and kinetic controlled products of hydrohalogenation of alkynes through vinyl cation intermediate Adapted from 25 In the hydrohalogenation of phenylpropene two different alkene products are formed because of thermodynamic and kinetic effects The linear sp hybridized vinyl cation may be attacked by the halogen from two different directions When attacked from the less sterically hindered side hydrogen the E alkene is produced attack to the other side forms the Z alkene Over short time scales the E alkene is favored because the attack from the less bulky side is preferred but over longer times the more stable bulky methyl and phenyl groups on opposite sides Z alkene is preferred Though the E alkene is initially formed it isomerizes to the Z alkene through a carbocation intermediate the stems from protonation and C C rotation steps 25 nbsp Hydroxyl neighboring group effect on vinyl cations Adapted from 23 nbsp Terminal chlorine neighboring group effect on 1 pentyne Adapted fromNeighboring groups surround the alkyne can enhance reaction kinetics by interacting with the intermediate via nonclassical approaches like intramolecular interactions An alkyne that is adjacent to a tertiary alcohol forms a four membered cyclic vinyl cation intermediate in which the oxygen of the hydroxyl group bridges two carbons across two bonds Likewise a five membered chloronium ring intermediate is formed from 5 chloro substituted 1 pentynes An unusually shifted product is formed because the intermediate undergoes heterolysis at the C5 Cl position 24 nbsp Electrophilic attack to allene groups Adapted fromIn the electrophilic attack of allenes it takes place in a manner that prefers to form a terminal adduct and the vinyl cation at the central carbon The polarization of the allene group show that the terminal carbons have a higher electron density and tendency to under nucleophilic attack However if the terminal end is stabilized by a substituent an allyl like cation may form as the electrophile attacks the central carbon Similar to phenyl rings adjacent to vinyl cations there must be bond rotation to achieve complete resonance stabilization 24 Rearrangements edit nbsp Major types of rearrangements in vinyl cations Adapted from 18 Vinyl cations intermediates that are formed during reactions can have a tendency to undergo rearrangements These rearrangements can be broadly categorized into two classes migrations into double bonds and rearrangements via the double bonds The first category involves 1 2 shifts that lead to the formation of an allyl cation while the second type involves the formation of another vinyl cation isomer nbsp 1 2 Hydride shift in vinyl cation Adapted from 18 nbsp Orbital interactions in vinyl cation to allyl cation rearrangement Adapted from 18 Vinyl cations undergo 1 2 hydride shifts to form an allyl stabilized cation 1 2 Hydride shifts are fairly common in alkyl cations and is fast in the NMR time scale However in vinyl cations this rearrangement is uncommon even though the rearrangement product in thermodynamically stable Much like the aryl substituted vinyl cations the interacting orbitals during the conversion of a linear vinyl cation to a non linear allyl cation are orthogonal and passes through a non planar transition state which makes the rearrangement difficult This is evident in the higher activation energies of 1 2 hydride shifts in vinyl cations compared to alkyl cations Examples of reactions in which this is observed would be the protonation of dialkyl substituted alkynes and in the solvolysis of ispropylvinyl trifluromethanesulfonate in trifluoroethanol nbsp 1 2 Methyl and 1 2 hydride shift in the same vinyl cation Adapted from 18 nbsp 1 2 methyl shift in tert butyl substituted vinyl cation Adapted from 18 nbsp 1 2 methyl shift in cyclic vinyl cation Adapted from 18 1 2 Methyl shifts also occurs in vinyl cations and like 1 2 hydride shifts they have higher activation barriers compared to their alkyl cation equivalents In the protonation of alkynes both 1 2 hydride and 1 2 methyl shifts may take place The preference depends on the alkyl substituent since it will dictate the resulting allyl cation product For t butyl substituents 1 2 methyl shifts are preferred and for isopropyl substituents 1 2 hydride shifts occur instead Cyclic alkenes also exhibit 1 2 methyl shifts upon solvolysis nbsp Alkyl shifts in vinyl cation that leads to changes in cyclic system Adapted from 18 In the solvolysis of spiro vinyl triflate the formation of a vinyl cation intermediate through a concerted process drives further rearrangements that involve the formation of a completely different cyclic structure Ring expansion can also be achieved through the rearrangement of a vinyl cation nbsp 1 2 hydride shift in vinyl cation to form another vinyl cation isomer Adapted from 18 The second class of rearrangements the vinyl cation rearranges to form another vinyl cation isomer The process is highly dependent on the solvent nature of the nucleophile and moieties in the compound In primary vinyl cations a 1 2 hydride is unlikely because of the low stability of the primary vinyl cation because of the low electron donating capability of hydrogen However this is still observed in special cases like in 1 methyl 2 phenylvinyl triflate where the resulting vinyl cation is resonance stabilized nbsp Halogen shift in vinyl cation Adapted from 18 nbsp Methyl shifts to the vinyl cation Adapted from 18 Methyl shifts are observed in the addition of tert butyl cation to but 2 yne The pentaallyl cation that is formed could be the result of a single 1 3 methyl shift or two consecutive 1 2 methyl shifts Rearrangement via the double bond could also change the size of a cyclic system In the solvolysis of methyl substituted cyclohexenyl triflate the rearrangement and non rearranged product are formed in almost equal amounts with a small preference to the rearrangement product because of its linear structure However it must be noted that there is some strain in the methylenecyclopentane rearrangement product Lastly halogens could also move into and stabilize a vinyl cation system In the reaction of 5 chloropent 1 yne with trifluoroacetic acid there is simultaneous protonation and 1 4 shift of chlorine that forms a bridged cyclic structure across four carbons Trifluoroacetic acid subsequently attacks the intermediate from the terminal end to form 2 chloropent 4 enyl trifluoroacetate This phenomenon is also observed in other halogens For instance fluoroalkynes can form a product with two adducts 18 Vinyl cations in pericyclic reactions edit nbsp Vinyl cation intermediates in pericyclic reactions Adapted from 26 Ketenes and allenes undergo 2 2 cycloadditions under thermal conditions in a concerted manner because they have pi orbitals that are orthogonal to each other Vinyl cation intermediates undergo the same process in the same manner because it has 2 p orbitals that can simultaneously overlap with the orbitals of the dienophile In the Smirnov Zamkow reaction between 2 butyne and Cl2 a cycloaddition leads to the formation of dichlorocyclobutane A similar reaction is also observed when allene is reacted with HCl After the cycloaddition a cationic cyclic intermediate is formed and then it is attacked by a nucleophile to form the final product 26 Vinyl cations in hydrohalogenation edit There is debate on whether a vinyl cation intermediate forms with the addition of a halide H X compound to a terminal alkyne for hydrohalogenation reactions Alternatively some believe that the addition of H and Br in this case is actually concerted citation needed References edit Okuyama T 2002 Solvolysis of Vinyl Iodonium Salts New Insights into Vinyl Cation Intermediates Acc Chem Res 35 1 12 doi 10 1021 ar0100374 Gronheid R 2001 Thermal and Photochemical Solvolysis of E and Z 2 Phenyl 1 Propenyl phenyl iodonium Tetrafluoroborate Benzenium and Primary Vinylic Cation Intermediates J Am Chem Soc 123 36 8760 doi 10 1021 ja010861n Walkinshaw Andrew J Xu Wenshu Suero Marcos G Gaunt Matthew J 2013 Copper Catalyzed Carboarylation of Alkynes via Vinyl Cations Journal of the American Chemical Society 135 34 12532 12535 doi 10 1021 ja405972h PMID 23947578 a b Stang P J 1979 Vinyl Cations New York Academic Press p 2 Jacobs Thomas L Searles Scott 1944 05 01 Acetylenic Ethers IV 1 Hydration Journal of the American Chemical Society 66 5 686 689 doi 10 1021 ja01233a007 ISSN 0002 7863 Grob C A 1964 Die Solvoltische Decarboxylierung von a b Ungesattigeten b Halogensauren Fragmentierungsreaktionen 9 Miteilung Helv Chim Acta 47 6 1590 doi 10 1002 hlca 19640470621 Miyamoto K 2009 Facile Generation of a Strained Cyclic Vinyl Cation by Thermal Solvolysis of Cyclopent 1 Enyl l3 Bromanes Angew Chem Int Ed 48 47 8931 4 doi 10 1002 anie 200903368 PMID 19830754 Noyce D 1965 Concerning the Acid Catalyzed Hydration of Acetylenes J Am Chem Soc 87 10 2295 doi 10 1021 ja01088a042 a b Hinkle R J 1999 Primary Vinyl Cations in Solution Kinetics and Products of a a Disubstituted Alkenyl aryl iodonium Triflate Fragmentations J Am Chem Soc 121 32 7437 7438 doi 10 1021 ja9916310 Shriner R L 1964 Systematic Identification of Organic Compounds New York Wiley Hanack Michael 1970 07 01 Vinyl cations in solvolysis reactions Accounts of Chemical Research 3 7 209 216 doi 10 1021 ar50031a001 ISSN 0001 4842 Stang P J 1979 Vinyl Cations New York Academic Press p 213 Okuyama Tadashi Takino Tomoki Sueda Takuya Ochiai Masahito 1995 03 01 Solvolysis of Cyclohexenyliodonium Salt a New Precursor for the Vinyl Cation Remarkable Nucleofugality of the Phenyliodonio Group and Evidence for Internal Return from an Intimate Ion Molecule Pair Journal of the American Chemical Society 117 12 3360 3367 doi 10 1021 ja00117a006 ISSN 0002 7863 a b Tidwell Thomas T P Richard J P John 2003 01 01 Advances in physical organic chemistry Vol 37 Academic ISBN 978 0120335374 OCLC 51840423 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Mayr Herbert Schneider Reinhard Wilhelm Dieter Schleyer Paul V R 1981 12 01 Vinyl cations Comparison of gas phase thermodynamic and solvolysis data with ab initio MO calculations PDF The Journal of Organic Chemistry 46 26 5336 5340 doi 10 1021 jo00339a015 ISSN 0022 3263 Grob C A Csapilla J Cseh G 1964 01 01 Die solvoltische Decarboxylierung von a b ungesattigeten b Halogensauren Fragmentierungsreaktionen 9 Miteilung Helvetica Chimica Acta 47 6 1590 1602 doi 10 1002 hlca 19640470621 ISSN 1522 2675 a b c Pople J A 1987 The structure of the vinyl cation Chemical Physics Letters 137 1 10 12 Bibcode 1987CPL 137 10P doi 10 1016 0009 2614 87 80294 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l Shchegolev A A Kanishchev M I 1981 Rearrangements in Vinyl Cations Russian Chemical Reviews 50 6 553 564 Bibcode 1981RuCRv 50 553S doi 10 1070 rc1981v050n06abeh002650 Muller Thomas Juhasz Mark Reed Christopher A 2004 03 12 The X ray Structure of a Vinyl Cation PDF Angewandte Chemie International Edition 43 12 1543 1546 doi 10 1002 anie 200352986 ISSN 1521 3773 PMID 15022228 a b c d e Hanack Michael 1976 10 01 Stabilized vinyl cations Accounts of Chemical Research 9 10 364 371 doi 10 1021 ar50106a004 ISSN 0001 4842 van Alem Kaj Lodder Gerrit Zuilhof Han 2000 03 01 a Substituted Vinyl Cations Stabilities and Electronic Properties The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 104 12 2780 2787 Bibcode 2000JPCA 104 2780V doi 10 1021 jp9935743 ISSN 1089 5639 van Alem Kaj Lodder Gerrit Zuilhof Han 2002 11 01 Delocalization Does Not Always Stabilize A Quantum Chemical Analysis of a Substituent Effects on 54 Alkyl and Vinyl Cations The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 106 44 10681 10690 Bibcode 2002JPCA 10610681V doi 10 1021 jp021766j ISSN 1089 5639 a b c Advances in Physical Organic Chemistry Academic Press 1971 12 31 p 185 ISBN 9780080581484 vinyl cation advances in physical organic chemistry modena a b c Modena Giorgio 1971 Vinyl cations Advances in Physical Organic Chemistry 9 185 280 a b Organic Chemistry Second ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press 2012 05 04 ISBN 9780199270293 a b Fleming Ian 2010 Molecular Orbitals and Organic Chemical Reactions Reference Edition Fleming Wiley Online Library doi 10 1002 9780470689493 ISBN 9780470689493 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vinyl cation amp oldid 1194924591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.