Title: CH 4: Organic Compounds: Cycloalkanes and their Stereochemistry
1CH 4 Organic Compounds Cycloalkanes and their
Stereochemistry
- Renee Y. Becker
- CHM 2210
- Valencia Community College
2Cycloalkanes
- Rings of carbon atoms (CH2 groups)
- Formula CnH2n
- Nonpolar, insoluble in water
- Compact shape
- Melting and boiling points similar to branched
alkanes with same number of carbons
3Naming Cycloalkanes
- Cycloalkane usually base compound
- May be cycloalkyl attachment to chain
- It is off of a chain that has a longer carbon
chain - Number carbons in ring if gt1 substituent.
- Number so that sub. have lowest numbers
- Give first in alphabet lowest number if possible
4Naming Cycloalkanes
- Find the parent. of carbons in the ring.
- Number the substituents
5Example 1
6Example 2
- Draw the structure
- a) propylcyclohexane
- b) cyclopropylcyclopentane
- c) 3-ethyl-1,1-dimethylcyclohexane
7Stereoisomerism
- Compounds which have their atoms connected in the
same order but differ in 3-D orientation
8Cis-Trans Isomerism
- Cis like groups on same face of ring
- Trans like groups on opposite face of ring
- Sub. Do not have to be on adjacent carbons of
ring
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10Cycloalkane Stability
- 5- and 6-membered rings most stable
- Bond angle closest to 109.5?
- Angle (Baeyer) strain
- Measured by heats of combustion per -CH2 -
- The more strain, the higher the heat of
combustion, per CH2 group - The energy released as heat when one mole of a
compound undergoes complete combustion with
oxygen.
11Stability of Cycloalkanes The Baeyer Strain
Theory
- Baeyer (1885) since carbon prefers to have bond
angles of approximately 109, ring sizes other
than five and six may be too strained to exist - Rings from 3 to 30 Cs do exist but are strained
due to bond bending distortions and steric
interactions
12Summary Types of Strain
- Angle strain - expansion or compression of bond
angles away from most stable - Torsional strain - eclipsing of bonds on
neighboring atoms - Steric strain - repulsive interactions between
nonbonded atoms in close proximity
13Heats of Combustion (per CH2 group) Alkane O2
? CO2 H2O
14Cyclopropane
- Large ring strain due to angle compression
- Very reactive, weak bonds
15Cyclopropane
- Torsional strain because of eclipsed hydrogens
16Cyclobutane
- Angle strain due to compression
- Torsional strain partially relieved by
ring-puckering
17Cyclopentane
- If planar, angles would be 108?, but all
hydrogens would be eclipsed. - Puckered conformer reduces torsional strain.
18Cyclohexane
- Combustion data shows its unstrained.
- Angles would be 120?, if planar.
- The chair conformer has 109.5? bond angles and
all hydrogens are staggered. - No angle strain and no torsional strain.
19Chair Conformer
20Boat Conformer
21Conformational Energy
22Axial and Equatorial Positions
23Drawing the Axial and Equatorial Hydrogens
24Monosubstituted Cyclohexanes
251,3-Diaxial Interactions
- Difference between axial and equatorial
conformers is due to steric strain caused by
1,3-diaxial interactions
26Hydrogen atoms of the axial methyl group on C1
are too close to the axial hydrogens three
carbons away on C3 and C5, resulting in 7.6
kJ/mol of steric strain
27Disubstituted Cyclohexanes
28Conformational Analysis of Disubstituted
Cyclohexanes
- In disubstituted cyclohexanes the steric effects
of both substituents must be taken into account
in both conformations - There are two isomers of 1,2-dimethylcyclohexane.
cis and trans - In the cis isomer, both methyl groups are on the
same face of the ring, and compound can exist in
two chair conformations - Consider the sum of all interactions
- In cis-1,2, both conformations are equal in energy
29Conformational Analysis of Disubstituted
Cyclohexanes
30Trans-1,2-Dimethylcyclohexane
- Methyl groups are on opposite faces of the ring
- One trans conformation has both methyl groups
equatorial and only a gauche butane interaction
between methyls (3.8 kJ/mol) and no 1,3-diaxial
interactions - The ring-flipped conformation has both methyl
groups axial with four 1,3-diaxial interactions - Steric strain of 4 ? 3.8 kJ/mol 15.2 kJ/mol
makes the diaxial conformation 11.4 kJ/mol less
favorable than the diequatorial conformation - trans-1,2-dimethylcyclohexane will exist almost
exclusively (gt99) in the diequatorial
conformation
31Trans-1,2-Dimethylcyclohexane
32Cis-Trans Isomers
- Bonds that are cis, alternate axial-equatorial
around the ring.
33Bulky Groups
- Groups like t-butyl cause a large energy
difference between the axial and equatorial
conformer. -
- Most stable conformer puts t-butyl equatorial
regardless of other substituents.
34Example 3
- Draw the most stable conformation
- a) ethylcyclohexane
- b) isopropylcyclohexane
- c) t-butylcyclohexane
- d) cis-1-t-butyl-3-ethylcyclohexane
- e) trans-1-t-butyl-2-methylcyclohexane
- f) trans-1-t-butyl-3-(1,1-dimethylpropyl)cyclohex
ane
35Example 4
- Which of the following is the most strained ring?
Least strained? Why?
36Table 4.2 Axial and Equatorial Relationship in
Cis and trans Disub Cyclohexanes
Cis/trans pattern Axial/Equatorial Relationship Axial/Equatorial Relationship
1,2Cis a,e e,a
1,2-trans a,a e,e
1,3-cis a,a e,e
1,3-trans a,e e,a
1,4-cis a,e e,a
1,4-trans a,a e,e