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Aromaticity in Heterocyclic Compounds

English · Paperback / Softback

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Aromaticity is a notion that appeared in the mid-nineteenth century to differentiate between unsaturated hydrocarbons and formally unsaturated benzene [1-3]. At the end of the nineteenth century it seemed that cyclicity was a necessary condition for differentiation between the two, but at the beginning of the twentieth century it turned out that the above assumption was not correct because cyclooctatetraene exhibited typical properties known for polyenes [4]. The essential property of b- zene-like compounds, often identified with aromatic compounds, was low react- ity. Hence thermodynamic stability was defined as resonance energy [5, 6] and was the first quantitative measure of aromaticity. Many theoretical approaches were proposed later to estimate this quantity, and now the criterion is often considered to be the most fundamental [7]. Almost at the same time, magnetic susceptibility was used to describe aromaticity [8, 9]. Consequently, many concepts based on mag- tism were developed, probably the most effective in assessment of aromaticity being nucleus independent chemical shift (NICS) [10] or Fowler's maps of ring currents [11]. The criterion served Schleyer as a basis for a definition of aromat- ity: "Compounds which exhibit significantly exalted diamagnetic susceptibility are aromatic. Cyclic delocalisation may also result in bond length equalization, abn- mal chemical shifts and magnetic anisotropies, as well as chemical and physical properties which reflect energetic stabilisation"[12].

List of contents

Experimental Thermochemistry of Heterocycles and Their Aromaticity: A Study of Nitrogen, Oxygen, and Sulfur Derivatives of Indane and Indene.- Aromatic Phosphorus Heterocycles.- Aromaticity and Tautomerism in Porphyrins and Porphyrinoids.- How Aromaticity Affects the Chemical and Physicochemical Properties of Heterocycles: A Computational Approach.- Aromaticity of Six-Membered Rings with One Heteroatom.- Chemistry of Hetero Analogs of Pentalene Dianion.- New Trends in Chemistry and Application of Aromatic and Related Selenaheterocycles.

Summary

Aromaticity is a notion that appeared in the mid-nineteenth century to differentiate between unsaturated hydrocarbons and formally unsaturated benzene [1–3]. At the end of the nineteenth century it seemed that cyclicity was a necessary condition for differentiation between the two, but at the beginning of the twentieth century it turned out that the above assumption was not correct because cyclooctatetraene exhibited typical properties known for polyenes [4]. The essential property of b- zene-like compounds, often identified with aromatic compounds, was low react- ity. Hence thermodynamic stability was defined as resonance energy [5, 6] and was the first quantitative measure of aromaticity. Many theoretical approaches were proposed later to estimate this quantity, and now the criterion is often considered to be the most fundamental [7]. Almost at the same time, magnetic susceptibility was used to describe aromaticity [8, 9]. Consequently, many concepts based on mag- tism were developed, probably the most effective in assessment of aromaticity being nucleus independent chemical shift (NICS) [10] or Fowler’s maps of ring currents [11]. The criterion served Schleyer as a basis for a definition of aromat- ity: “Compounds which exhibit significantly exalted diamagnetic susceptibility are aromatic. Cyclic delocalisation may also result in bond length equalization, abn- mal chemical shifts and magnetic anisotropies, as well as chemical and physical properties which reflect energetic stabilisation”[12].

Product details

Assisted by Michal Ksawery Cyranski (Editor), Tadeusz Marek Krygowski (Editor), Ksawery Cyranski (Editor), Ksawery Cyranski (Editor), Tadeus Marek Krygowski (Editor), Tadeusz Marek Krygowski (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 09.02.2011
 
EAN 9783642087936
ISBN 978-3-642-08793-6
No. of pages 344
Weight 544 g
Illustrations XIII, 344 p. 88 illus., 8 illus. in color.
Series Topics in Heterocyclic Chemistry
Topics in Heterocyclic Chemistry
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Chemistry > Organic chemistry

C, ORGANIC CHEMISTRY, Chemistry and Materials Science, thermochemistry, resonance energy, tautomer

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