Title: Preparation of Dienes
1Preparation of Dienes
21,3-Butadiene
590-675C
CH3CH2CH2CH3
chromia- alumina
2H2
- More than 4 billion pounds of 1,3-butadiene
prepared by this method in U.S. each year
3Dehydration of Alcohols
KHSO4
heat
4Dehydrohalogenation of Alkyl Halides
KOH
heat
5Reactions of Dienes
- isolated dienes double bonds react
independently of one another - cumulated dienes specialized topic
- conjugated dienes reactivity pattern requires
us to think of conjugated diene system as a
functional group of its own
6Addition of Hydrogen Halidesto Conjugated Dienes
7Electrophilic Addition to Conjugated Dienes
H
X
H
- Proton adds to end of diene system
- Carbocation formed is allylic
8Example
9Example
HCl
10via
H
X
Protonation of the end ofthe diene unit gives
anallylic carbocation.
11and
3-Chlorocyclopentene
121,2-Addition versus 1,4-Addition
1,2-addition of XY
13HBr Addition to 1,3-Butadiene
HBr
- electrophilic addition
- 1,2 and 1,4-addition both observed
- product ratio depends on temperature
14Rationale
- 3-Bromo-1-butene (left) is formed faster
than1-bromo-2-butene (right) because allylic
carbocations react with nucleophiles
preferentially at the carbon that bears the
greater share of positive charge.
(formed faster)
15Rationale
1-Bromo-2-butene is more stable
than3-bromo-1-butene because it has amore
highly substituted double bond.
(formed faster)
16Rationale
The two products equilibrate at 25C.Once
equilibrium is established, the morestable
isomer predominates.
major product at -80C
(formed faster)
17Kinetic ControlversusThermodynamic Control
- Kinetic control major product is the one formed
at the fastest rate - Thermodynamic control major product is the one
that is the most stable
18HBr
19higher activation energy
formed more slowly
20Halogen Addition to Dienes
- gives mixtures of 1,2 and 1,4-addition products
21Example
Br2
(37)
(63)
22The Diels-Alder Reaction
- Synthetic method for preparing compounds
containing a cyclohexene ring
23In general...
conjugated diene
alkene (dienophile)
cyclohexene
24via
transition state
25Mechanistic features
- concerted mechanism
- cycloaddition
- pericyclic reaction
- a concerted reaction that proceeds through a
cyclic transition state
26Recall the general reaction...
alkene (dienophile)
conjugated diene
cyclohexene
- The equation as written is somewhat misleading
because ethylene is a relatively unreactive
dienophile.
27What makes a reactive dienophile?
- The most reactive dienophiles have an
electron-withdrawing group (EWG) directly
attached to the double bond.
28Dienes
Dienophiles
29Example
H2C
CH
30Example
benzene
100C
31Acetylenic Dienophile
32Diels-Alder Reaction is Stereospecific
A stereospecific reaction is one in which
stereoisomeric starting materials give
stereoisomeric products characterized by
terms like syn addition, anti elimination,
inversion of configuration, etc.
- Diels-Alder syn addition to alkene
- cis-trans relationship of substituents on alkene
retained in cyclohexene product
33Example
O
C6H5
COH
H
H
34Example
35Cyclic dienes yield bridged bicyclicDiels-Alder
adducts.
36 37 38The ? Molecular OrbitalsofEthylene and
1,3-Butadiene
39Orbitals and Chemical Reactions
- A deeper understanding of chemical reactivity can
be gained by focusing on the frontier orbitals of
the reactants. - Electrons flow from the highest occupied
molecular orbital (HOMO) of one reactant to the
lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) of the
other.
40Orbitals and Chemical Reactions
- We can illustrate HOMO-LUMO interactions by way
of the Diels-Alder reaction between ethylene and
1,3-butadiene. - We need only consider only the ? electrons of
ethylene and 1,3-butadiene. We can ignore the
framework of ? bonds in each molecule.
41The ? MOs of Ethylene
- red and blue colors distinguish sign of wave
function - bonding ? MO is antisymmetric with respect to
plane of molecule
Bonding ? orbital of ethylenetwo electrons in
this orbital
42The ? MOs of Ethylene
Antibonding ? orbital of ethyleneno electrons
in this orbital
Bonding ? orbital of ethylenetwo electrons in
this orbital
43The ? MOs of 1,3-Butadiene
- Four p orbitals contribute to the ? system of
1,3-butadiene therefore, there are four ?
molecular orbitals. - Two of these orbitals are bonding two are
antibonding.
44The Two Bonding ? MOs of 1,3-Butadiene
HOMO
4 ? electrons 2 ineach orbital
Lowest energy orbital
45The Two Antibonding ? MOs of 1,3-Butadiene
Highest energy orbital
LUMO
Both antibondingorbitals are vacant
46A ? Molecular Orbital Analysisof theDiels-Alder
Reaction
47MO Analysis of Diels-Alder Reaction
- Inasmuch as electron-withdrawing groups increase
the reactivity of a dienophile, we assume
electrons flow from the HOMO of the diene to the
LUMO of the dienophile.
48MO Analysis of Diels-Alder Reaction
HOMO of 1,3-butadiene
- HOMO of 1,3-butadiene and LUMO of ethylene are
in phase with one another - allows ? bond formation between the alkene and
the diene
LUMO of ethylene (dienophile)
49MO Analysis of Diels-Alder Reaction
HOMO of 1,3-butadiene
LUMO of ethylene (dienophile)