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Henry Rzepa's Blog

Henry Rzepa's Blog
Chemistry with a twist
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Interesting ChemistryCambridgeSteve BachrachChimieAnglais
Publié

Here is a challenge: what is the longest C-C bond actually determined (in which both carbon termini are sp3 hybridised)? I pose this question since Steve Bachrach has posted on how to stabilize long bonds by attractive dispersive interactions, and more recently commenting on what the longest straight chain alkane might be before dispersive interaction start […]

Interesting ChemistryMatthias BickelhauptPotential Energy SurfaceReaction MechanismChimieAnglais
Publié

It was three years ago that I first blogged on the topic of the Sn2 reaction. Matthias Bickelhaupt had suggested that the Sn2 reaction involving displacement at a carbon atom was an anomaly; the true behaviour was in fact exhibited by the next element down in the series, silicon.

EliminationMigrationPericyclicReaction MechanismTutorial MaterialChimieAnglais
Publié

The Curtius reaction is represented in most chemistry texts and notes as following path (a) below. It is one of a general class of thermally induced rearrangement which might be described as elimination/migration (in a sense similar to this ring contraction migration/elimination), in this case implicating a nitrene intermediate if the two steps occur consecutively.

Curly ArrowsDeficiencyIntrinsic Reaction CoordinateReaction MechanismTutorial MaterialChimieAnglais
Publié

Two years ago, I discussed how curly arrow pushing is taught, presenting four different ways of showing the arrows. One of the comments posted to that blog suggested that all of the schemes shown below were deficient in one aspect.

Dimer ProductIPadPericyclicPostscriptPotential Energy SurfaceChimieAnglais
Publié

organic chemistry. It does not look like much, but this small little molecule brought us ferrocene, fluxional NMR, aromatic anions and valley-ridge inflexion points. You might not have heard of this last one, but in fact I mentioned the phenomenon in my post on nitrosobenzene. As for being at a crossroads, more like a Y-junction.

Curly ArrowsInteresting ChemistryFree Energy Activation BarrierHistoricalΣ/π OrthogonalityChimieAnglais
Publié

Recollect, Robinson was trying to explain why the nitroso group appears to be an o/p director of aromatic electrophilic substitution. Using σ/π orthogonality, I suggested that the (first ever) curly arrows as he drew them could not be the complete story, and that a transition state analysis would be needed. Here it is.