Die Polarisation der σ-Bindungen im Azulen

1972 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 110-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Seydewitz ◽  
E.D. Schmid

Abstract On the basis of a simple MO-approach a model to interprete the IR-absorption intensity of the aromatic CH-stretching vibration is developed. Accordingly the gradient of the CH-bond moment is a linear function of the ionicity of the CH-bond.Eight azulenes, which were deuterated at various specified positions, were synthetisized and out of their IR-spectra the gradients of the CH-bond moment at all positions of azulene could be determined. From these experimental data it is concluded, that in relation to benzene the electrons of the CH-bonds in azulene are displaced towards the C-atom at positions with high and towards the H-atom at positions with low π-electron density.Such a polarisation of the CH-bonds in azulene is confirmed, although only qualitatively, by the ionicities of the CH-bonds calculated by the CNDO/2-method and is also in accordance with other experimental observations such as bond lengths and angles, C13H-coupling constants, and the frequencies of the CH-stretching vibrations.It is demonstrated that experiment and calculation fail to correlate quantitatively due to in-adequacies inherent in the CNDO/2-method.

2006 ◽  
Vol 20 (25n27) ◽  
pp. 3860-3865 ◽  
Author(s):  
MASAHIRO KATOH ◽  
NOBUAKI OKANO ◽  
TOSHIHIDE HORIKAWA ◽  
TAHEI TOMIDA ◽  
NOBUNARI ITOH

The IR spectra of the molecular contaminants on surface of optical materials were measured. The optical disks used were SiO 2, BK7 ( SiO 2 70%, B 2 O 3 10%, K 2 O 8%, N 2 O 8%), CaF 2, ZnSe and Al 2 O 3. N 2, O 2, H 2 O , and CO 2 were adopted as contamination gases. IR spectra of H 2 O (2.7kPa) on BK7 at 373K showed two absorption bands ( OH stretching vibration: around 4000cm-1-3500cm-1 and OH bending vibration: around 2000cm-1-1500cm-1). The absorption intensity decreased with a decrease in temperature and a new band (around 3250cm-1) appeared at 173K. The new band was attributed to phase transition of H 2 O . These phenomena were also observed on the other three discs, except for SiO 2. IR spectra of SiO 2 showed OH stretching band (3676cm-1). The absorption intensity decreased with a decrease in temperature. But two new bands (3720cm-1 and 3620cm-1) appeared under an atmosphere of N 2 (66.5kPa), O 2 (66.5kPa), H 2 O (2.7kPa) or CO 2 (0.7 or 13.3kPa). A similar phenomenon was also observed for BK7, which has OH group. These results suggested the functional group of SiOH interacted with contamination molecules.


2000 ◽  
Vol 55 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 276-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Kh. Poleshchuk ◽  
J. N. Latosińska

The electron density and quadrupole coupling constants of molecules containing Sb are analysed. The NQCC for antimony, calculated using the extended basis 6-311G** are much lower than the experimental data, while the use of the small 3-21G* basis led to NQCC closer to the experimental ones.


1990 ◽  
Vol 43 (9) ◽  
pp. 1541 ◽  
Author(s):  
MJ Collins ◽  
S Sternhell ◽  
CW Tansey

The 4J(H-C-C-Me) coupling constants of methyl-substituted derivatives, probes of bond order, have been used to examine the ground-state π- electron distributions in azulene (1), biphenylene (2) and 1,6- methano [10] annulene (3). The experimental data obtained are in good agreement with theoretical predictions for biphenylene (2) and provide some evidence for π-electron disproportionation towards the five-membered ring in azulene (1). The bond orders in 1,6-methano [10] annulene (3) obtained in this work are at variance with those predicted on the grounds of bond lengths.


1995 ◽  
Vol 49 (12) ◽  
pp. 1772-1775 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Louis Staggs ◽  
William G. Lyon

FT-IR spectra were obtained of 0.5% volumetric solutions of propyl sulfide, propyl sulfoxide, and propyl sulfone in hexane, CCl4, CS2, and CHCl3 to assist in the assignment of FT-IR-PAS spectra of propyl sulfoxide sorbed within the structure of several peats and onto cellulose. The C-H stretching bands of all three compounds showed a 10-fold larger solvent sensitivity than did analogous aliphatic bands in a comparable series of n-alkanes in solution. The S=O stretching bands of alkyl sulfoxides are known to be quite sensitive to solvent environments because of donor-acceptor interactions involving the oxygen of the sulfoxide group and the slightly acidic protons of generalized organic acids; the expected decreases in frequency were seen with propyl sulfoxide and acidic solvents like chloroform. The frequencies of asymmetric and symmetric stretching vibrations of the -SO2 group of propyl sulfone both exhibit smaller decreases in Old, than does the sulfoxide S=O stretching vibration.


1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (7) ◽  
pp. 1051-1062 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saul Wolfe ◽  
B. Mario Pinto ◽  
Vikram Varma ◽  
Ronald Y. N. Leung

The magnitude of a one-bond C–H coupling constant depends upon the chemical environment of the hydrogen atom and, especially, upon its stereochemical relationship to vicinal lone electron pairs. However, a lone electron pair is not essential for the observation of a stereoelectronic effect, since even cyclohexane exhibits different axial and equatorial C–H coupling constants. We propose the name "Perlin Effect" to describe such observations. An analysis of the extensive experimental data regarding the Perlin Effect reveals that, in cyclohexane and in six-membered rings having one or more heteroatoms of the first row attached to the carbon of interest, 1JC–H is always larger for an equatorial hydrogen than for an axial hydrogen. The magnitude of the Perlin Effect is reduced when the carbon carrying the hydrogen of interest is attached to first row and second row atoms or heteroatoms, and it reverses when the carbon atom carries two heteroatoms from below the first row.The existence of the Perlin Effect in nuclear magnetic resonance spectra is reminiscent of an infrared effect known as the Bohlmann bands, whose origin has previously been explained by quantitative perturbational molecular orbital (PMO) theory in terms of the effects of lone electron pairs upon the lengths and strengths and, therefore, the chemical reactivities of vicinal C—H bonds. Since the magnitude of a one-bond C–H coupling constant is expected to vary inversely with bond length, the origins of the Perlin Effect and of the Bohlmann bands would seem to be the same, i.e., the longer (weaker) C—H bond has the smaller one-bond coupling constant. This expectation has now been confirmed: for 25 molecules, representing a total of 35 different kinds of C—H bonds, the bond lengths, stretching force constants, and charge distributions have been determined from fully optimized 6-31G* molecular orbital calculations. In nine of ten cases for which experimental data exist for pairs of diastereomeric or diastereotopic hydrogens, the shorter C—H bond of the pair has the larger coupling constant; in the tenth case, the experimental difference is only 1–2 Hz. Moreover, a global analysis of the data in terms of the equation J = A + BqCqH + C/r, where J is an experimental coupling constant, q is a total atomic charge, and r is a C—H bond length, correlates 23 different types of C—H bonds linearly with a correlation coefficient of 0.915. The C parameter is the leading term of the correlation. Among the systems studied theoretically are eight molecules of the type CH3CHXY (Y = OH, SH; X = F, Cl, OH, SH), which are representative of systems containing both endocyclic and exocyclic first row and second row anomeric effects. The exocyclic effect is found to be very similar for first row and second row substituents, but the endocyclic effect is larger for the first row substituent. Both findings agree with experimental data in solution. Finally, quantitative PMO analysis has been employed to analyse the origins of the different C—H bond lengths in the various molecules of the study. Keywords: anomeric effect, PMO analysis, NMR, stereochemistry, molecular orbital calculations.


1983 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 586-595 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Perjéssy ◽  
Pavol Hrnčiar ◽  
Ján Šraga

The wave numbers of the fundamental C=O and C=C stretching vibrations, as well as that of the first overtone of C=O stretching vibration of 2-(3-, and 4-substituted phenylmethylene)-1,3-cycloheptanediones and 1,3-cycloheptanedione were measured in tetrachloromethane and chloroform. The spectral data were correlated with σ+ constants of substituents attached to phenyl group and with wave number shifts of the C=O stretching vibration of substituted acetophenones. The slope of the linear dependence ν vs ν+ of the C=C stretching vibration of the ethylenic group was found to be more than two times higher than that of the analogous correlation of the C=O stretching vibration. Positive values of anharmonicity for asymmetric C=O stretching vibration can be considered as an evidence of the vibrational coupling in a cyclic 1,3-dicarbonyl system similarly, as with derivatives of 1,3-indanedione. The relationship between the wave numbers of the symmetric and asymmetric C=O stretching vibrations indicates that the effect of structure upon both vibrations is symmetric. The vibrational coupling in 1,3-cycloheptanediones and the application of Seth-Paul-Van-Duyse equation is discussed in relation to analogous results obtained for other cyclic 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds.


1990 ◽  
Vol 55 (6) ◽  
pp. 1485-1490 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Schwendt ◽  
Milan Sýkora

The infrared and Raman spectra of M2[V2O2(O2)4(H2O)]·xH2O and M2[V2O2(O2)4(D2O)]·xD2O (M = N(CH3)4, Cs) were measured. In the region of the vanadium-oxygen stretching vibrations, the spectra were interpreted based on normal coordinate analysis, employing empirical correlations between the bond lengths and force constants.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 20
Author(s):  
Valentina Ferraro ◽  
Marco Bortoluzzi

The influence of copper(I) halides CuX (X = Cl, Br, I) on the electronic structure of N,N′-diisopropylcarbodiimide (DICDI) and N,N′-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCC) was investigated by means of computational DFT (density functional theory) methods. The coordination of the considered carbodiimides occurs by one of the nitrogen atoms, with the formation of linear complexes having a general formula of [CuX(carbodiimide)]. Besides varying the carbon–nitrogen bond lengths, the thermodynamically favourable interaction with Cu(I) reduces the electron density on the carbodiimides and alters the energies of the (NCN)-centred, unoccupied orbitals. A small dependence of these effects on the choice of the halide was observable. The computed Fukui functions suggested negligible interaction of Cu(I) with incoming nucleophiles, and the reactivity of carbodiimides was altered by coordination mainly because of the increased electrophilicity of the {NCN} fragments.


1992 ◽  
Vol 7 (8) ◽  
pp. 2269-2272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y-S. Her ◽  
E. Matijević ◽  
W.R. Wilcox

The reaction kinetics involved in the continuous precipitation of monodispersed spherical yttrium basic carbonate particles was studied. The amount of powder produced was a linear function of H2CO3 generated by the decomposition of urea in mildly acidic solutions. A model equation, containing an empirical constant F, was derived to describe the conversion yield as a function of reactant concentrations, reaction time, and temperature. The calculated and experimental data agree well for both the batch and continuous processes.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document