The Diels-Alder Reaction: PROBLEM 22.10
The Diels-Alder Reaction: PROBLEM 22.10
The Diels-Alder Reaction: PROBLEM 22.10
!
$ HOMO of
CH±CH $ the diene
(!2)
! $ The [4 + 2]
H2C ! CH2 cycloaddition
!
$ is allowed by
Both $
! a thermal
overlaps H2C±CH2 LUMO of pathway.
are $
the alkene
(!*)
!
bonding.
PROBLEM 22.10
Use orbital drawings to show that the [4 ! 2] cycloaddition reaction is photochemically
forbidden.
PROBLEM 22.11
Use orbital drawings to determine whether the thermal [4 ! 4] cycloaddition reaction
is allowed or forbidden.
PROBLEM 22.12
Indicate how many electron pairs are involved in these reactions and determine whether
each reaction is allowed or forbidden:
h" #
a) b)
the reaction of 1,3-butadiene (the diene) with ethene (the dienophile), is illustrated in
the following equation:
CH2
HC CH2
!
HC CH2
CH2
Diene Dienophile
The yield of cyclohexene in this particular reaction is not very high. In general, the
yields in the Diels-Alder reaction are much better if the diene and the dienophile are
substituted with groups of opposite polarity—that is, with electron-withdrawing groups
on one component and electron-donating groups on the other. The vast majority of ex-
amples that have been reported have employed electron-withdrawing groups on the
dienophile. Some examples of the many alkenes, substituted with electron-withdrawing
groups, that are excellent dienophiles in the Diels-Alder reaction are as follows:
N O
O O P CO2CH3
H C W
C
W
W
C
P
OCH2CH3 O X
C C
W
W
W
C H CO2CH3
O P
N
O
The following equation provides an example of the use of a good dienophile in a Diels-
Alder reaction that proceeds in excellent yield:
O O
140%C
! (90%)
Next, let’s address the stereochemistry of the reaction. If the orbitals overlap as il-
lustrated in Section 22.5, the addition is syn on both the diene and the dienophile. An
example showing that the addition is indeed syn on the dienophile is illustrated in the
following equation. In this reaction the cis-stereochemistry of the carboxylic acid
groups in the dienophile is preserved in the adduct:
H CO2H CO2H
40°C
!
H CO2H CO2H
(100%)
Now let’s consider the three-dimensional shape of the diene. To maximize the sta-
bilization due to conjugation, the p orbitals on the central carbons of a diene must be
Hornback_Ch22_956-1010 12/16/04 12:13 PM Page 979
parallel. For an acyclic diene, such as 1,3-butadiene, there are two planar conformations
for which these orbitals are parallel:
4
H 3 CH2 H CH2
C C
C C
H2C 2 H2 H CH2
1
s-trans s-cis
Unreactive Reactive
The conformation that has C-1 and C-4 of the double bonds on opposite sides of the
single bond between C-2 and C-3 is termed the s-trans conformation, whereas the con-
formation that has them on the same side of the single bond is called the s-cis confor-
mation. The s-trans conformation of 1,3-butadiene is more stable because it has less
steric strain—the larger groups are farther apart. Although the interconversion of these
two conformations is fast, only the s-cis conformation can react in the Diels-Alder cy-
cloaddition. In the s-trans conformation, C-1 and C-4 are too far apart to bond simulta-
neously to the dienophile.
The reactivity of a particular diene depends on the concentration of the s-cis
conformation in the equilibrium mixture. Factors that increase the concentration of
this conformation make the diene more reactive. As an example of this effect, consider
2,3-dimethyl-1,3-butadiene:
4
H3C 3 CH2 H3C CH2
C C
C C
H2C 2 CH3 H3C CH2
1
s-trans s-cis
Unreactive Reactive
The methyl groups on C-2 and C-3 cause the s-trans and s-cis conformations to have
similar amounts of steric strain. Therefore, more of the s-cis conformer is present at
equilibrium for 2,3-dimethyl-1,3-butadiene than for 1,3-butadiene itself. For this rea-
son, 2,3-dimethyl-1,3-butadiene reacts about 10 times faster than 1,3-butadiene in the
Diels-Alder reaction.
In the case of 3-methylenecyclohexene the double bonds are held in the s-trans con-
formation. This compound cannot react as a diene in the Diels-Alder reaction.
3-Methylenecyclohexene
In contrast, the double bonds of cyclopentadiene are held in the s-cis conformation.
This makes cyclopentadiene so reactive as a diene in the Diels-Alder reaction that it
Hornback_Ch22_956-1010 12/16/04 12:13 PM Page 980
dimerizes at room temperature. One molecule reacts as the diene and the other as the
dienophile to form dicyclopentadiene, as shown in the following equation:
H H
H H
H
! or
H
H
Diene Dienophile H
Cyclopentadiene Dicyclopentadiene
PROBLEM 22.13
Explain which of these isomers of 2,4-hexadiene is more reactive as a diene in the
Diels-Alder reaction:
R R'
4 Exo substituents
4
3 R' 3
R'
!
R 1
2 1
R' 2
R
Endo substituents
R
Groups that are cis to this bridge are termed exo substituents, and groups that are trans
to this bridge are termed endo substituents.
Hornback_Ch22_956-1010 12/16/04 12:13 PM Page 981
O O
The orientation of the reactants that leads to the endo product is as follows:
1 O O
2 X X
O H O H
W
W
H
W
X X
O O H
Endo adduct
(observed)
O O
X X
H
O O
H X H X
H
O O
Exo adduct
(not observed)
(Models may be useful to help you visualize these different orientations.) Because the
orientation leading to the endo adduct is more sterically congested than that leading to
the exo adduct, it is apparent that steric effects are not controlling the orientation.
Rather, it appears that a stabilizing interaction between the orbitals on C-2 and C-3 of
the diene with pi orbitals on the substituents of the dienophile causes the endo orienta-
tion to be preferred. As a result, the group with the p orbitals prefers to be cis to the
double bond bridge and trans to the one-carbon bridge.
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When both the diene and the dienophile are unsymmetrically substituted, regio-
isomeric products are possible. When the diene is substituted on C-1, the “ortho-like”
product is preferred:
N(CH2CH3)2 O (CH3CH2)2N O
“ortho-like”
product
O O
“para-like”
product
These preferences can be rationalized by using arguments based on molecular orbital
theory, but these are beyond the scope of this book.
The Diels-Alder reaction is certainly one of the most important reactions in organic
chemistry. A few other interesting examples are provided in the following equations.
Benzene is not very reactive as a diene because the product would not be aromatic.
However, reactive dienophiles do add to the central ring of anthracene. In this case the
product, with two benzene rings, has not lost much aromatic resonance energy.
O H CO2H
X H
COH CO2H
110°C
!
COH
X (87%)
O
Hornback_Ch22_956-1010 12/16/04 12:13 PM Page 983
160%C
(95%)
CO2CH3
W CO2CH3
C 150%C
! (87%)
C
W CO2CH3
CO2CH3
Atoms other than carbon can even be part of the diene or dienophile:
H O OCH3 O OCH3
200%C
! (57%)
H
W CO2H
C # #
a) b)
P
! !
C
W HO2C
H
O2CCH3 O
NC CN
# #
c) ! d) !
O2CCH3
O
O O
# #
e) f) !
O
Hornback_Ch22_956-1010 12/16/04 12:13 PM Page 984
O
CO2H
OCH3 # #
g) ! h) !
EtO HO2C
O
NO2
# #
i) ! j) ! 2
CO2H
#
k) !
CO2H
h"
! (30%)
O O
CH2 h"
! (62%)
CH2
CPN
CPN
h"
(77%)