Three-Center Configuration with Four,Three, and Two Electrons for Carbon,Boron, Hydrogen, and Halogen Exchange. A Model and Theoretical Study with Experimental Evidence
Abstract
The introduction of specific sites in organic frames for accommodation of various modes of bonding
has been focused on reaction types which are described by using different theoretical models
with or without a definite experimental proof. In this study three-center four-, three-, and twoelectron
systems based on carbon-, boron-, hydrogen-, and halogen exchange are under consideration.
Based on the number of electrons in the transition state or transition complex it is shown
that all transfer or exchange reactions share the same ratio numbers expressed as the quotient of
the transitional bond distance under investigation and its normal bond length. With X-ray data of
model systems it was even possible to give the ratio numbers for a three-center four-electron configuration
experimental support with additional ab initio data. Furthermore a novel model type of
substitution in organic chemistry is introduced through electrophilic insertion, informative for
enzyme-substrate interactions based on the lock-and-key model. Reactions based on a three-center
two-electron configuration mostly follow a nonlinear transition. In this alignment there will be
a pursuit of cyclization for stabilization via homoaromaticity as homocyclopropenyl cation. The
molecular dynamics of such a process is discussed based on recent X-ray crystallographic data of
the symmetrically bridged, nonclassical geometry of the 2-norbornyl cation. In the present paper
the focus is aimed at the transition intermediate of the (classical) 2-norbornyl cation involved in
the isomerization into the nonclassical geometry. This model description is compared with a simple
molecular rearrangement of the 1-propyl cation into the corner-protonated cyclopropane using
the ab initio data. The exclusivity of the former isomerization compared with the latter one
could be unambiguously demonstrated by the invention that the intramolecular electron shift can
be expressed in a linear relationship between the concerned electron-donating and accepting bond lengths. Finally, the fluor transitions as divalent atoms in a three-center two-electron configuration
are described. The role of fluor in comparison with the other halogens is striking. The
attention was focused on an excellent correspondence between the recent chemical and theoretical
evidence for a symmetrical fluoronium ion in solution. Simple dialkylfluoroniumions in contrast
to the other halonium ions are not present in solution. Although the geometry of the fluoronium
ion theoretically can be described as a real minimum, the C-F-C angle of 120˚ is apparently
the borderline transition for dissociation in C+ and F-C.
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