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Henry Rzepa's Blog

Henry Rzepa's Blog
Chemistry with a twist
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Crystal_structure_miningInteresting ChemistryAbove SearchCambridgeConformational AnalysisQuímicaInglês
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The electronic interaction between a single bond and an adjacent double bond is often called σ-π-conjugation (an older term for this is hyperconjugation), and the effect is often used to e.g. explain why more highly substituted carbocations are more stable than less substituted ones.

Interesting ChemistryHelical Metal WireHelical SystemsQuímicaInglês
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This is a recently published (hypothetical) molecule which has such unusual properties that I cannot resist sharing it with you. It is an annulene with 144 all-cis CH groups, being a (very) much larger cousin of (also hypothetical) systems mooted in 2009,.

Final ProductPericyclicTutorTutorial MaterialQuímicaInglês
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It is always rewarding when one comes across a problem in chemistry that can be solved using a continuous stream of rules and logical inferences from them. The example below is one I have been using as a tutor in organic chemistry for a few years now, and I share it here.

Interesting ChemistryElectronic EnergyEnergyMulti-reference SolutionQuímicaInglês
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Although have dealt with the π-complex formed by protonation of PhNHOPh in several posts, there was one aspect that I had not really answered; what is the most appropriate description of its electronic nature? Here I do not so much provide an answer, as try to show how difficult getting an accurate answer might be.

GeneralManagerOpendataQuímicaInglês
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With metrics in science publishing controversial to say the least, I pondered whether to write about the impact/influence a science-based blog might have (never mind whether it constitutes any measure of esteem). These are all terms that feature large when an (academic) organisation undertakes a survey of its researchers’ effectiveness.‡ WordPress (the organisation that provides the […]

Interesting ChemistryChemicalMichael DewarQuímicaInglês
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The transient π-complex formed during the “[5,5]” sigmatropic rearrangement of protonated N,O-diphenyl hydroxylamine can be (formally) represented as below, namely the interaction of a six-π-electron aromatic ring (the phenoxide anion 2) with a four-π-electron phenyl dication-anion pair 1. Can one analyse this interaction in terms of aromaticity?

Interesting ChemistryEnergyHigh Energy MoleculesMichael DewarReaction MechanismQuímicaInglês
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Michael Dewar famously implicated a so-called π-complex in the benzidine rearrangement, back in the days when quantum mechanical calculations could not yet provide a quantitatively accurate reality check. Because this π-complex actually remains a relatively unusual species to encounter in day-to-day chemistry, I thought I would try to show in a simple way how it forms.

Interesting ChemistryHenry ShineMichael DewarReaction MechanismTS(CC)QuímicaInglês
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Kinetic isotope effects have become something of a lost art when it comes to exploring reaction mechanisms. But in their heyday they were absolutely critical for establishing the mechanism of the benzidine rearrangement. This classic mechanism proceeds via bisprotonation of diphenyl hydrazine, but what happens next was the crux.

Conformational AnalysisEnergy ProfilePericyclicReaction MechanismTutorial MaterialQuímicaInglês
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This is an interesting result I got when studying the [1,4] sigmatropic rearrangement of heptamethylbicyclo-[3.1.0]hexenyl cations. It fits into the last lecture of a series on pericyclic mechanisms, and just before the first lecture on conformational analysis. This is how they join.