Rd. Bach et al., Inversion versus retention of configuration for nucleophilic substitution at vinylic carbon, J AM CHEM S, 123(24), 2001, pp. 5787-5793
A high-level computational study using CCSD, CCSD(T), and G2(+) levels of t
heory has shown that unactivated vinyl substrates such as vinyl chloride wo
uld afford gas phase, single-step halide exchange by a pure in-plane sigma
-approach of the nucleophile to the backside of the C-CI sigma bond. Geomet
ry optimization by CCSD/6-31+G* and CCSD(T)/6-31+G* confirms the earlier fi
ndings of Glukhovtsev, Press, and Radom that the S(N)2 reaction of Cl- with
unactivated vinyl chloride in the gas phase occurs by a sigma attack. Comp
lexation of vinyl chloride with Na+ does not alter this in-plane a preferen
ce. However, moderately activated dihaloethylenes such as 1-chloro-1-fluoro
ethylene undergo gas-phase S(N)2 aback by the accepted pi -route where the
nucleophile approaches perpendicular to the plane of the C=C. In the latter
case a single-step pi pathway is preferred for the Cl- + H2C=CFCl reaction
. This is the first definitive example at a high level of theory where a si
ngle-step pi nucleophilic vinylic substitution is preferred over a multiste
p mechanism in the gas phase. The activation barriers for these gas-phase s
ingle-step sigma- and pi -processes involving both naked anions and Na+ com
plexes are, however, prohibitively high. Solvation and the presence of a co
unterion must play a dominant role in nucleophilic vinylic substitution rea
ctions that proceed so readily in the condensed phase. In solution, nucleop
hilic vinylic substitution reactions involving electron-withdrawing groups
on the carbon-carbon double bond (e.g., -CN, -CHO, and -NO2) would almost c
ertainly proceed via a free discrete carbanionic intermediate in accord wit
h experiment.