6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1268f95

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Kinetics of the Strain-Promoted Oxidation-Controlled Cycloalkyne-1,2-quinone Cycloaddition: Experimental and Theoretical Studies

Hans LischkaHans LischkaAdelia J. A. AquinoAdelia J. A. AquinoFloris L. Van DelftWilhelmus J. E. LooijenHan ZuilhofHan ZuilhofHan ZuilhofJorge EscorihuelaJorge EscorihuelaAnita Das

subject

Bicyclic molecule010405 organic chemistryChemistryOrganic ChemistryKineticsSolvationCycloalkyne010402 general chemistryOrganische Chemie01 natural sciencesArticleCycloaddition0104 chemical sciencesQuinonechemistry.chemical_compoundReaction rate constantComputational chemistryLife ScienceSurface modificationQuímica orgànicaVLAG

description

Stimulated by its success in both bioconjugation and surface modification, we studied the strain-promoted oxidation-controlled cycloalkyne–1,2-quinone cycloaddition (SPOCQ) in three ways. First, the second-order rate constants and activation parameters (ΔH⧧) were determined of various cyclooctynes reacting with 4-tert-butyl-1,2-quinone in a SPOCQ reaction, yielding values for ΔH⧧ of 4.5, 7.3, and 12.1 kcal/mol, for bicyclo[6.1.0]non-4-yne (BCN), cyclooctyne (OCT), and dibenzoazacyclooctyne (DIBAC), respectively. Second, their reaction paths were investigated in detail by a range of quantum mechanical calculations. Single-configuration theoretical methods, like various DFT and a range of MP2-based methods, typically overestimate this barrier by 3–8 kcal/mol (after inclusion of zero-point energy, thermal, and solvation corrections), whereas MP2 itself underestimates the barrier significantly. Only dispersion-corrected DFT methods like B97D (yielding 4.9, 6.4, and 12.1 kcal/mol for these three reactions) and high-level CCSD(T) and multireference multiconfiguration AQCC ab initio approaches (both yielding 8.2 kcal/mol for BCN) give good approximations of experimental data. Finally, the multireference methods show that the radical character in the TS is rather small, thus rationalizing the use of single-reference methods like B97D and SCS-MP2 as intrinsically valid approaches.

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.7b02614