Mechanism of the vinylcyclopropane-cyclopentene rearrangement studied by quasiclassical direct dynamics

Authors
Citation
C. Doubleday, Mechanism of the vinylcyclopropane-cyclopentene rearrangement studied by quasiclassical direct dynamics, J PHYS CH A, 105(26), 2001, pp. 6333-6341
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Physical Chemistry/Chemical Physics
Journal title
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
ISSN journal
10895639 → ACNP
Volume
105
Issue
26
Year of publication
2001
Pages
6333 - 6341
Database
ISI
SICI code
1089-5639(20010705)105:26<6333:MOTVRS>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
The stereochemical course of the thermal rearrangement of vinylcyclopropane to cyclopentene is computed using quasiclassical trajectories run on a mod ified AM1 potential parametrized to fit ab initio calculations. At 573 K, 3 4000 trajectories are initialized quasiclassically with a Boltzmann distrib ution at 3 transition state (TS) structures, trideuterated for a total of 8 diastereomeric TSs. The computed product ratio is si:sr:ar:ai = 42:30:10:1 8 (exptl 40:23:13:24), where s,a refers to suprafacial or antarafacial ally lic participation and r,i refers to retention or inversion of the migrating methylene. Initialization at each TS leads to all 4 products-that is, the product distribution is entirely under dynamical control. The temperature d ependence of the product ratio over 400-1000 K is small. At 573 K, 83% of t he trajectories have lifetimes under 400 fs. For times t ( 400 fs the produ ct ratio is strongly time-dependent; for t > 400 fs the product ratio is ap proximately constant and closer to statistical. However, trajectories initi alized at the 3 TS structures do not give identical product distributions u nder any circumstances. Root-mean-square angular velocities of the torsions are approximately constant over nearly the entire course of the reaction. These data demonstrate nonstatistical dynamics and are inconsistent with a mechanism involving a statistical intermediate. Instead, the mechanism cons ists of 4 competing direct reactions.