Determination of Structures
and Energetics of Small- and Medium-Sized One-Carbon-Bridged Twisted
Amides using ab Initio Molecular Orbital Methods: Implications for
Amidic Resonance along the C–N Rotational Pathway
Posted on 2015-08-21 - 00:00
Twisted
amides containing nitrogen at the bridgehead position are attractive
practical prototypes for the investigation of the electronic and structural
properties of nonplanar amide linkages. Changes that occur during
rotation around the N–C(O) axis in one-carbon-bridged twisted
amides have been studied using ab initio molecular orbital methods.
Calculations at the MP2/6-311++G(d,p) level performed on a set of
one-carbon-bridged lactams, including 20 distinct scaffolds ranging
from [2.2.1] to [6.3.1] ring systems, with the CO bond on
the shortest bridge indicate significant variations in structures,
resonance energies, proton affinities, core ionization energies, frontier
molecular orbitals, atomic charges, and infrared frequencies that
reflect structural changes corresponding to the extent of resonance
stabilization during rotation along the N–C(O) axis. The results
are discussed in the context of resonance theory and activation of
amides toward N-protonation (N-activation) by distortion. This study
demonstrates that one-carbon-bridged lactamsa class of readily
available, hydrolytically robust twisted amidesare ideally
suited to span the whole spectrum of the amide bond distortion energy
surface. Notably, this study provides a blueprint for the rational
design and application of nonplanar amides in organic synthesis. The
presented findings strongly support the classical amide bond resonance
model in predicting the properties of nonplanar amides.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Szostak, Roman; Aubé, Jeffrey; Szostak, Michal (2016). Determination of Structures
and Energetics of Small- and Medium-Sized One-Carbon-Bridged Twisted
Amides using ab Initio Molecular Orbital Methods: Implications for
Amidic Resonance along the C–N Rotational Pathway. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.5b00881