CY 1001: Organic Chemistry: Aromaticity: (4 Classes + 1 Tutorial)
CY 1001: Organic Chemistry: Aromaticity: (4 Classes + 1 Tutorial)
CY 1001: Organic Chemistry: Aromaticity: (4 Classes + 1 Tutorial)
Dr. BB
27/04/2021 (13:00-13:50) Tuesday
28/04/2021 (13:00-13:50)
29/04/2021 (11:00-11:50)
30/04/2021 (10:00-10:50, 11:00-11:50 tutorial)
Prof. G. Sekar
3/05/2021 (08:00-08:50, 09:00-09:50)
4/05/2021 (08:00-08:50, 13:00-13:50 tutorial)
Dr. Anbarasan
5/05/2021 (13:00-13:50)
6/05/2021 (11:00-11:50)
7/05/2021 (10:00-10:50, 11:00-11:50)
10/05/2021 (08:00-08:50 tutorial)
Text Books:
2. Organic Chemistry by Robert Thornton Morrison and Robert Neilson Boyd, 6th
Edition, Pearson
6
Benzene
• Benzene (C6H6) is the simplest aromatic hydrocarbon (or
arene).
• Isolated in 1825 by Michael Faraday
• Benzene has four degrees of unsaturation by formula,
making it a highly unsaturated hydrocarbon.
• Unsaturated hydrocarbons such as alkenes, alkynes and
dienes readily undergo addition reactions, benzene does not.
Reagent Cyclohexene Benzene
• Benzene does react with bromine, but only in the presence of FeBr3
(a Lewis acid), and the reaction is a substitution, not an addition.
Reactions of benzene: substitutions
1. Nitration
C6H6 + HNO3, H2SO4 C6H5NO2 + H2O
2. Sulfonation
C6H6 + H2SO4, SO3 C6H5SO3H + H2O
3. Halogenation
C6H6 + X2, Fe C6H5X + HX
4. Freidel-Crafts alkylation
C6H6 + RX, AlCl3 C6H5R + HX
Any Proposed structures of benzene must account for
In addition,
Its lack of reactivity towards electrophilic addition.
11
• August Kekulé 1866 proposed that benzene was a rapidly
equilibrating mixture of two compounds, each containing a six-
membered ring with three alternating bonds.
• In the Kekulé description, the bond between any two carbon atoms
is sometimes a single bond and sometimes a double bond.
Drawbacks
• Although benzene is still drawn as a six-membered ring with
alternating bonds, in reality there is no equilibrium between the
two different kinds of benzene molecules.
The Kekulé structures satisfy the first two criteria but not the third,
because having three alternating bonds means that benzene
should have three short double bonds alternating with three longer
single bonds.
13
New representation
• Later he proposed the structure of benzene as a resonance hybrid
of the two Lewis structures, with the dashed lines of the hybrid
indicating the delocalization of the bonds. This fits well with the
requirements
• We will use one of the two Lewis structures and not the hybrid in
drawing benzene. This will make it easier to keep track of the
electron pairs in the bonds (the electrons).
• Because each bond has two electrons, benzene has six
electrons.
15
• In benzene, the actual bond length (1.39 Å) is intermediate
between the carbon—carbon single bond (1.53 Å) and the
carbon—carbon double bond (1.34 Å).
16
Stability of Benzene and Aromaticity
• Consider the heats of hydrogenation of cyclohexene, 1,3-
cyclohexadiene and benzene, all of which give cyclohexane when
treated with excess hydrogen in the presence of a metal catalyst.
17
Delocalization Energy
18
Delocalization Energy
19
Delocalization Energy
20
The Criteria for Aromaticity—Hückel’s Rule
Four structural criteria must be satisfied for a compound to be
aromatic.
23
[3] A molecule must be completely conjugated.
Aromatic compounds must have a p orbital on every atom.
24
[4] A molecule must satisfy Hückel’s rule, and contain
a particular number of electrons.
Hückel's rule:
25
Note:
Hückel’s rule refers to the number of electrons, not the
number of atoms in a particular ring.
27
Note the relationship between each compound type and a similar open-
chained molecule having the same number of electrons.
28
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
The Basis of Hückel’s Rule:
29
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Molecular Orbitals:
• Molecular orbital (MO) theory permits a better explanation of
bonding in aromatic systems.
• When forming molecular orbitals from atomic orbitals, keep in
mind that a set of n atomic orbitals forms n molecular orbitals.
• If two atomic orbitals combine, two molecular orbitals are
formed.
• Recall that aromaticity is based on p orbital overlap.
• Also note that the two lobes of each p orbital are opposite in
phase, with a node of electron density at the nucleus.
• When two p orbitals combine, two molecular orbitals should
form.
30
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Molecular Orbitals:
• The combination of two p orbitals can be
• constructive: with like phases reinforcing, or
• destructive: with opposite phases cancelling.
32
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Molecular Orbitals of Benzene:
• The six MOs are labeled 1- 6, with 1 being the lowest energy
and 6 being the highest.
33
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Molecular Orbitals of Benzene:
35
6
4 5
six p-orbitals 2 3
1
Degenerate orbitals:
orbitals that have the 1: zero nodes
Bonding
same energy 2 and 3: one node
36
36
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
The Inscribed Polygon Method of Predicting Aromaticity
37
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
The Inscribed Polygon Method of Predicting Aromaticity
38
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
The Inscribed Polygon Method of Predicting Aromaticity
40
For the compound to be aromatic, these bonding MOs must be
completely filled with electrons, so the “magic numbers” for aromaticity
fit Hückel’s 4n + 2 rule.
41
Cyclopropenyl cation
H 2 3
4n+2=2
1 n=0
H H
aromatic
cyclopropenyl cation
2 -electrons
Cyclopentadienyl cation
H
4 5
H H 4n=4
2 3 n=1
H H
anti-aromatic
cyclopentadienyl cation 1
4 -electrons
Cycloheptatrienyl cation
6 7
H H
4 5 4n+2=6
H H
n=1
2 3
H H aromatic
H 1
cycloheptatrienyl cation
6 -electrons 42
Cyclopropenyl anion
H H H
+ B: + B:H
4n=4
H H H H
n=1
cyclopropenyl anion
anti-aromatic
4 -electrons
2 3
1
Cyclopentadienyl anion
H H H
H H H H
+ B: + B:H
4n+2=6
H H H H
n=1
p Ka ~ 16 cyclopentad ienyl anion
aromatic
6 -electrons
4 5
2 3
1 43
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
The Inscribed Polygon Method of Predicting Aromaticity
44
Resonance Energy (Kcal/mol)
Aromatic compounds and Ions
2 - pi electron system
Cyclopropenyl
cation
6- pi electron system
14 - pi electrons system
Cyclopentadienyl Benzene cycloheptatrienyl
anion cation (tropylium ion)
N O S Phenanthrene
N H
Pyridine pyrrole furan thiophene
18 - pi electrons system
10 - pi electrons system
N
H
Naphtheline Azulene Indole Chrysene
Anti-aromatic compounds and Ions
4 – pi electron system
cyclobutadiene cyclopropenyl
anion Cyclopentadienyl
cation
8 – pi electron system
12 – pi electron system
heptalene
Some common observations on compounds
H Cl H
+ AgBF4 BF4 + AgCl
H H H H
H Cl H
H H H H
+ AgBF4 BF4 + AgCl
H H H H
H H H
pKa ~ 16
H H H H
+ H 2O + H 3O +
H H H H
H
H Br
H H H H
H H Br -
H H
H H 48
H H
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Examples of Aromatic Rings:
• Heterocycles containing oxygen, nitrogen or sulfur, can also
be aromatic.
• With heteroatoms, one must determine whether the lone
pair is localized on the heteroatom or part of the
delocalized system.
• An example of an aromatic heterocycle
is pyridine.
49
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Examples of Aromatic Rings:
• Pyrrole is an aromatic heterocycle that contains a five-
membered ring with two bonds and one nitrogen
atom.
• Pyrrole has a p orbital on every ring atom that overlaps,
so it is completely conjugated.
• Pyrrole has six electrons—four from the bonds and
two from the lone pair (obeys Huckel’s Rule).
• It is aromatic since it is cyclic, planar, completely
conjugated, and has 4n + 2 electrons.
50
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Examples of Aromatic Rings:
• Imidazole is an aromatic heterocycle with two N atoms,
one which is similar to the N atom of pyridine, and the
other which is similar to the N atom of pyrrole. It is a
component of histidine
and histamine.
51
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Examples of Aromatic Rings:
Both negatively and positively charged ions can be
aromatic if they possess all the necessary elements.
53
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Examples of Aromatic Rings:
• Cyclopentadiene is more acidic than many hydrocarbons
because its conjugate base is aromatic.
• The pKa of cyclopentadiene is 15, much lower (acidic) than
the pKa of any C—H bond discussed thus far.
• The cyclopentadienyl anion is both aromatic and
resonance stabilized, so it is a very stable base.
• Cyclopentadiene itself is not aromatic because it is not fully
conjugated.
54
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Examples of Aromatic Rings:
• The tropylium cation is a planer carbocation with three
double bonds and a positive charge contained in a
seven-membered ring.
• Because the tropylium cation has three bonds and no
other nonbonded electron pairs, it contains six
electrons, thereby satisfying Hückel’s rule.
55
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Examples of Aromatic Rings:
• Two or more six-membered rings with alternating double
and single bonds can be fused together to form
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).
• There are two different ways to join three rings together,
forming anthracene and phenanthrene.
56
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Examples of Aromatic Rings:
• Completely conjugated rings larger than benzene are also
aromatic if they are planar and have 4n + 2 electrons.
• An annulene is a monocyclic hydrocarbon with alternating
double and single bonds.
• To name an annulene, indicate the number of atoms in the
ring in brackets and add the word annulene.
57
Benzene and Aromatic Compounds
Examples of Aromatic Rings:
• [10]-Annulene has 10 electrons, which satisfies
Hückel's rule, but a planar molecule would place the two
H atoms inside the ring too close to each other. Thus, the
ring puckers to relieve this strain.
• Since [10]-annulene is not planar, the 10 electrons can’t
delocalize over the entire ring and it is not aromatic.
58
Which of the following is aromatic?
59
Which of these is antiaromatic?
A B
D
C
B 8 pi electrons 4(2)=8
60
11.23: Heterocyclic Aromatic Compounds (please read)
Heterocycle: any cyclic compound that contains ring atom(s)
other than carbon (N, O, S, P). Cyclic compounds that contain
only carbon are called carbocycles
N
N N
N N
N H O S S O
H
pyridine pyrrole imidazole furan thiophene thiazole oxazole
pyridine
61
Pyrrole: 6 -electron system similar to that of cyclopentadienyl
anion. There are four sp2-hybridized carbons with 4 p orbitals
perpendicular to the ring and 4 -electrons and a lone pair of
electrons in an unhybridized p2 orbital that is part of the
aromatic sextet
N
H
pKa ~ 5.2
+ H2O + H3O+
N N
H
pKa ~ -4
+ H2O + H3O+
N N
H H H
62
Nomenclature of Benzene Derivatives
• To name a benzene ring with one substituent, name the
substituent and add the word benzene.
64
• There are three different ways that two groups can be
attached to a benzene ring, so a prefix—ortho, meta, or
para—can be used to designate the relative position of the
two substituents.
66
For three or more substituents on a benzene ring:
1. Number to give the lowest possible numbers around the ring.
2. Alphabetize the substituent names.
3. When substituents are part of common roots, name the molecule as
a derivative of that monosubstituted benzene. The substituent that
comprises the common root is located at C1.
67
• A benzene substituent is called a phenyl group, and it can be
abbreviated in a structure as “Ph-”.
68
• The benzyl group, another common substituent that contains a
benzene ring, differs from a phenyl group.
69
Give the IUPAC name for each compound.
PhCH(CH3)2 isopropylbenzene
OH
m-butylphenol
Br
2-bromo-5-chlorotoluene
Cl
70
Which structure matches the given name?
o-dichlorobenzene
Cl
Cl Cl Cl Cl
Cl
Br Cl
A B
C D
Cl
Cl
71
4-chloro-1,2-diethylbenzene
Cl Cl
Cl
Cl
A B C D
Cl
72
R
E
S
O
N
A
N
C
E
For reading
Conjugation For reading
a) The special stability provided by three or more adjacent,
parallel, overlapping p orbitals in same plane.