The Importance of Electrostatic Interactions on the Conformational

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The Importance of Electrostatic Interactions on the Conformational Behavior of Substituted 1,3-Dioxanes: The Case of 5-Phenyl-1,3-dioxane William F. Bailey* and Kyle M. Lambert Department of Chemistry, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06269-3060, United States *E-mail: [email protected]

Seminal, fundamental investigations by Ernest Eliel’s group in the 1960’s and 70’s of conformational equilibria in substituted 1,3-dioxanes contributed significantly to our current understanding of the etiology of stereoelectronic effects in saturated heterocyclic systems. Following Eliel’s lead, we have explored the conformational behavior of 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxanes that bear remote substituents in an effort to probe the effect of the distant substituent on the conformational equilibria of such systems.

Introduction The conformational energy of 5-phenyl.1,3-dioxane was determined, as illustrated in Scheme 1, by Eliel and Knoeber in 1968 (1). The energy difference, 1.03 ± 0.02 kcal / mol favoring the equatorial isomer, is notably smaller than the ~2.8 kcal/mol conformational energy of phenylcyclohexane (2). The lower conformational energy of 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxane vis-à-vis phenylcyclohexane was attributed at the time to, “a diminution of the [syn-] axial interactions because, where in cyclohexane there are axial hydrogens in positions 1 and 3, in 1,3-dioxane there are, instead, electron pairs on oxygen” (1). However, given the results of recent investigations of the conformational behavior of phenylcyclohexane, this explanation must be reconsidered.

© 2017 American Chemical Society Cheng et al.; Stereochemistry and Global Connectivity: The Legacy of Ernest L. Eliel Volume 2 ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2017.

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Scheme 1. Conformational energy of 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxane. Reproduced from reference (3). Copyright 2016, American Chemical Society.

The main interactions responsible for the rather large conformational energy of phenylcyclohexane, in which the plane of the axial phenyl ring is perpendicular to the benzylic C–H bond, were shown by Allinger and Tribble (4) to be steric repulsion between the equatorial hydrogens at the C(2) and C(6) positions of the cyclohexane ring and the ortho- hydrogens of the axial phenyl group. Thus, syn-axial interactions contribute little to the conformational energy of phenylcyclohexane. It seems clear that the same repulsive steric interactions present in phenylcyclohexane should also be in 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxane were it also to adopt a rotameric conformation having the plane of the ring perpendicular to the C(5) benzylic hydrogen. Given this context, the question is: why is the conformational energy of a phenyl group in 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxane only a third as large as that of phenylcyclohexane? An unexpected result of a MP2/6-311+G*computational investigation of the rotameric conformations of phenyl rings in a series of axially and equatorially substituted 1,3-dioxanes and tetrahydropyrans (5) suggested an answer to this question. As shown in Figure 1, the computed lowest energy rotamer of axial 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxane is one in which the plane of the phenyl ring bisects the 1,3-dioxane ring and is parallel to the benzylic C(5)–H bond. This rotameric arrangement leads to an attractive CH…O Coulombic interaction between an ortho-hydrogen and the oxygens of the 1,3-dioxane ring. We reasoned that the strength of such an interaction should respond to substituents placed remotely on the phenyl ring. That is: electron-withdrawing groups should strengthen the attractive CH…O interaction and electron-donating groups should lessen the interaction. The results presented below demonstrate that this is indeed the case.

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Figure 1. Calculated minimum energy rotamer of axial 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxane. Reproduced from reference (5). Copyright 2015, American Chemical Society.

Results and Discussion A representative series of anancomeric 2-alkyl-5-aryl-1,3-dioxanes, 1 – 14, bearing remote substituents on the phenyl ring were prepared by acid catalyzed condensation of isobutyraldehyde or pivaldehyde with 2-aryl-1,3-propane diols (3). The diastereoisomeric pairs of 5-aryl-1,3-dioxanes were then separated chromatographically and fully characterized by 1H NOESY analysis (3). An X-ray crystallographic analysis of cis-2-t-butyl-5-p-chlorophenyl-1,3dioxane (3), shown in Figure 2, validates the computational result noted above: the axial phenyl ring in adopts a rotameric arrangement in which an otho-hydrogen is in close proximity to one of the oxygen atoms of the dioxane (3). Following the protocol pioneered by Eliel and Knoeber (1), each of the 5aryl-1,3-dioxane pairs (1-14) were equilibrated at room temperature as solutions in either cyclohexane or diethyl ether over dry Amberlyst-15 resin. After the solutions were neutralized by shaking with anhydrous K2CO3, the area ratio of the isomeric mixture was determined by capillary GC analysis. It was judged that equilibrium had been reached when the same area ratios were obtained from initially pure samples of each isomer. Area ratios for each equilibration, which reflect the equilibrium constant for the process, were taken as the average of 5−14 independent determinations from each side, and the free energy difference for the equilibrium was calculated in the normal way: ΔG° = −RT ln K. The results of these studies are summarized in Table 1.

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Figure 2. Crystal structure of cis-2-t-butyl-5-(p-chlorophenyl)-1,3-dioxane (3). The top view is from the side; the lower view, from above, shows the CH…O interaction. Reproduced from reference (3). Copyright 2016, American Chemical Society.

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Table 1. Equilibria in 5-aryl -1,3-dioxanes. Reproduced from reference (3). Copyright 2016, American Chemical Society.

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Inspection of the data presented in Table 1 demonstrates that substituents on the phenyl ring, as remote as the para position, affect the conformational energy of a phenyl group. Electron-withdrawing substituents (p-Cl, p-Br, p-CF3, and 3,5-bisCF3) stabilize the cis-isomer while electron-donating groups (p-OMe and p-TMS) have a destabilizing effect. Amazingly and unexpectedly, a 3,5-bis-CF3 substituted 5-phenyl group actually displays a pronounced preference for the axial orientation (Table 1, entries 9 and 10). This is, to our knowledge, an unprecedented result. It would appear that substituents affect the strength of the non-classical CH…O hydrogen bond (6) between an ortho-hydrogen and a dioxane oxygen. This, in turn, is reflected in the conformational energy of a substituted 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxane. The origin of these substituent effects is almost certainly electrostatic. A Hammett plot of the experimental ΔG° values in cyclohexane solution from Table 1 versus σm constants, derived from the pKa’s of substituted benzoic acids (7), presented in Figure 3, displays a very linear correlation (r = 0.98) having a slope (ρ) of +1.5. In this connection, it should be noted that para-substituents are meta with respect to the ortho hydrogen of the phenyl ring that interacts with a ring oxygen. This linear correlation strongly implies that the effect of substituents on the ΔG° of a 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxane has the same origin as the effect of those substituents on the acidity of benzoic acid: namely, an inductive, electrostatic phenomenon.

Figure 3. Hammett plot of experimental ΔG° values (Table 1) determined in cyclohexane solution vs. σm values. Reproduced from reference (3). Copyright 2016, American Chemical Society.

In short, electron-withdrawing substituents render the ortho-hydrogens of the axial C(5) phenyl group more positive thus increasing the attractive non-classical 24 Cheng et al.; Stereochemistry and Global Connectivity: The Legacy of Ernest L. Eliel Volume 2 ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2017.

CH…O hydrogen bond of that hydrogen with an oxygen of the 1,3-dioxane. The conclusion is rendered pictorially in Figure 4.

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Figure 4. Effect of electron-withdrawing p-substituents on the conformational energy of a 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxane.

Conclusions In summary, the minimum energy rotameric conformation of an axial 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxane has been demonstrated to be one that positions the aryl ring such that an ortho-hydrogen is in close proximity to one of the dioxane ring oxygens. The results described above demonstrate that the strength of this non-classical CH…O hydrogen bond may be tuned in response to the electron-withdrawing or electron-donating ability of substituents positioned remotely on the aryl ring: electron-withdrawing substituents decrease the conformational energy of the phenyl group while electron-donating substituents increase the conformational energy of the group. The results of this investigation of the conformational behavior of 5-phenyl-1,3-dioxanes strengthens the notion that non-classical CH…X hydrogen bonds are often relevant to an understanding of broader conformational issues involving heterocyclic systems bearing aryl groups. A full account of the study summarized above is available (3).

References 1. 2. 3.

4.

5.

6.

Eliel, E. L.; Knoeber, M. C. Conformational Analysis. XVI. 1, 3-Dioxanes. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1968, 90, 3444–3458. Eliel, E. L.; Wilen, S. H. Stereochemistry of Organic Compounds; Wiley: New York, 1994; pp 697−698. Bailey, W. F.; Lambert, K. M.; Stempel, Z. D.; Wiberg, K. B.; Mercado, B. Q. Controlling the Conformational Energy of a Phenyl Group by Tuning the Strength of a Nonclassical CH···OHydrogen Bond: The Case of 5-Phenyl1,3-dioxane. J. Org. Chem. 2016, 81, 12116–12127. Allinger, N. L.; Tribble, M. T. Conformational Analysis. LXXVIII. The Conformation of Phenylcyclohexane and Related Molecules. Tetrahedron Lett. 1971, 12, 3259–3262. Wiberg, K. B.; Lambert, K. L.; Bailey, W. F. The Role of CH···OCoulombic Interactions in Determining Rotameric Conformations of Phenyl Substituted 1,3-Dioxanes and Tetrahydropyrans. J. Org. Chem. 2015, 80, 7884–7889. For a review of non-classical hydrogen bonds, see: Takahashi, O.; Kohno, Y.; Nishio, M. Relevance of Weak Hydrogen Bonds in the Conformation 25 Cheng et al.; Stereochemistry and Global Connectivity: The Legacy of Ernest L. Eliel Volume 2 ACS Symposium Series; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 2017.

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of Organic Compounds and Bioconjugates: Evidence from Recent Experimental Data and High-Level ab Initio MO Calculations. Chem. Rev. 2010, 110, 6049–6076. Hansch, C.; Leo, A.; Taft, R. W. A Survey of Hammett substituent Constants and Resonance and Field Parameters. Chem. Rev. 1991, 91, 165–195.

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