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{{Short description|Different molecular structures formed only by rotation about single bonds}} | {{Short description|Different molecular structures formed only by rotation about single bonds}} | ||
⚫ | ] to interconvert one conformation to another. The ''gauche'' conformation on the right is a conformer, while the ''eclipsed'' conformation on the left is a transition state between conformers. Above: Newman projection; below: depiction of spatial orientation.]] | ||
{{Merge from|Alkane stereochemistry|discuss=Talk:Conformational isomerism#Proposed merge of Alkane stereochemistry into Conformational isomerism|date=December 2020}} | |||
⚫ | ] to interconvert one conformation to another. The ''gauche'' conformation on the right is a conformer, while the ''eclipsed'' conformation on the left is a transition state between conformers. Above: Newman projection; below: depiction of spatial orientation.]] | ||
In ], ''' |
In ], '''rotamers''' are chemical species that differ from one another primarily due to rotations about one or more ]s. Various arrangements of ]s in a ] that differ by rotation about single bonds can also be referred to as different '''conformations'''. Conformers/rotamers differ little in their energies, so they are almost never separable in a practical sense.{{Citation needed|date=December 2024}} Rotations about single bonds are subject to small energy barriers.<ref>{{GoldBookRef |file=F02520 |title=Free rotation (hindered rotation, restricted rotation) |year=1996}}</ref>{{not in source|date=December 2024}} When the time scale for interconversion is long enough for isolation of individual rotamers (usually arbitrarily defined as a ] of interconversion of 1000 seconds or longer), the species are termed '''atropisomers''' (''see:'' ]ism).<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Moss|first=GP|date=1996-01-01|title=Basic terminology of stereochemistry (IUPAC Recommendations 1996)|journal=Pure and Applied Chemistry|volume=68|issue=12|pages=2193–2222|doi=10.1351/pac199668122193|s2cid=98272391|issn=1365-3075|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>Ōki, Michinori (1983) Recent Advances in Atropisomerism, in ''Topics in Stereochemistry'', Vol. 14 (N. L. Allinger, E. L. Eliel and S. H. Wilen, Eds.), Hoboken, NJ:John Wiley & Sons, pp. 1–82; ''published online in 2007'', DOI: 10.1002/9780470147238.ch1, see and {{Dead link|date=July 2019|bot=InternetArchiveBot|fix-attempted=yes}}, accessed 12 June 2014.</ref><ref name=bookatrop>{{cite book|last=Alkorta|first=Ibon|author2=Jose Elguero |author3=Christian Roussel |author4=Nicolas Vanthuyne |author5=Patrick Piras |title=Atropisomerism and Axial Chirality in Heteroaromatic Compounds|series=Advances in Heterocyclic Chemistry|year=2012|doi= 10.1016/B978-0-12-396530-1.00001-2|volume=105 |pages=1–188|isbn=9780123965301|hdl=10261/62060}}</ref> The ] of substituted ]s constitutes a common form of conformers.<ref>{{cite web|last=Hunt|first=Ian|title=Stereochemistry|url=http://www.chem.ucalgary.ca/courses/350/Carey5th/Ch07/ch7-1.html|work=University of Calgary|access-date=28 October 2013}}</ref> | ||
⚫ | The study of the energetics of bond rotation is referred to as '''conformational analysis'''.<ref name=dougherty>{{cite book|last=Anslyn|first=Eric|title=Modern Physical Organic Chemistry|url=https://archive.org/details/modernphysicalor00ansl|url-access=limited|year=2006|publisher=University Science|isbn=978-1891389313|page=|author2=Dennis Dougherty}}</ref> In some cases, conformational analysis can be used to predict and explain product selectivity, mechanisms, and rates of reactions.<ref name="nobel lect">{{cite journal|last=Barton|first=Derek|title=The Principles of Conformational Analysis.|url=https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/chemistry/laureates/1969/barton-lecture.html|journal=Nobel Media AB 2013|year=1970|volume=169|issue=3945|pages=539–44|publisher=Elsevier Publishing Co.|doi=10.1126/science.169.3945.539|access-date=10 November 2013|pmid=17746022|bibcode=1970Sci...169..539B}}</ref> Conformational analysis also plays an important role in rational, structure-based ]. | ||
Conformational isomers are thus distinct from the other classes of ] (i. e. ] isomers) where interconversion necessarily involves breaking and reforming of chemical bonds.<ref>{{cite web|last=Hunt|first=Ian|title=Stereochemistry|url=http://www.chem.ucalgary.ca/courses/350/Carey5th/Ch07/ch7-1.html|work=University of Calgary|access-date=28 October 2013}}</ref> For example, <small>L</small>/<small>D</small>- and ''R''/''S''- configurations of ] molecules have different handedness and optical activities, and can only be interconverted by breaking one or more bonds connected to the ] atom and reforming a similar bond in a different direction or spatial orientation. They also differ from ] (''cis''/''trans'') isomers, another class of stereoisomers, which require the ] of ]s to break for interconversion. (Although the distinction is not always clear-cut, since certain bonds that are formally single bonds actually have double bond character that becomes apparent only when secondary resonance contributors are considered, like the C–N bonds of ], for instance.) Due to rapid interconversion, conformers are usually not isolable at room temperature. | |||
⚫ | The study of the energetics |
||
==Types== | ==Types== | ||
{{Quote box|width = 25% |title = ] definition |quote = '''rotamer''': One of a set of conformers arising from restricted rotation about one single bond.<ref name=GoldBookR05407>{{cite journal |title=rotamer |journal=Gold Book |date=2014 |publisher=IUPAC |ref=Gold Book R05407 |doi=10.1351/goldbook.R05407 |doi-access=free }}</ref>}} | |||
] | ] | ||
Rotating their carbon–carbon bonds, the molecules ethane and propane have three local energy minima. They are structurally and energetically equivalent, and are called the ''staggered conformers''. For each molecule, the three substituents emanating from each carbon–carbon bond are staggered, with each H–C–C–H ] (and H–C–C–CH<sub>3</sub> dihedral angle in the case of propane) equal to 60° (or approximately equal to 60° in the case of propane). The three eclipsed conformations, in which the dihedral angles are zero, are transition states (energy maxima) connecting two equivalent energy minima, the staggered conformers. | Rotating their carbon–carbon bonds, the molecules ethane and propane have three local energy minima. They are structurally and energetically equivalent, and are called the ''staggered conformers''. For each molecule, the three substituents emanating from each carbon–carbon bond are staggered, with each H–C–C–H ] (and H–C–C–CH<sub>3</sub> dihedral angle in the case of propane) equal to 60° (or approximately equal to 60° in the case of propane). The three eclipsed conformations, in which the dihedral angles are zero, are transition states (energy maxima) connecting two equivalent energy minima, the staggered conformers. | ||
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While simple molecules can be described by these types of conformations, more complex molecules require the use of the ] to describe the different conformers.<ref name=dougherty /> | While simple molecules can be described by these types of conformations, more complex molecules require the use of the ] to describe the different conformers.<ref name=dougherty /> | ||
More specific examples of |
More specific examples of conformations are detailed elsewhere: | ||
*Ring conformation | *Ring conformation | ||
**]s, including with chair and boat conformations among others. | **]s, including with chair and boat conformations among others. | ||
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*] – due to restricted inversion of a bond angle. | *] – due to restricted inversion of a bond angle. | ||
==Free energy and equilibria of conformational isomers== | |||
==Equilibrium of conformers== | |||
] | ] | ||
Conformers generally exist in a ]<ref name="eq conformer">{{cite web|last=Bruzik|first=Karol|title=Chapter 6: Conformation|url=http://tigger.uic.edu/~kbruzik/text/chapter6.htm|archive-url=https://archive.today/20131111153747/http://tigger.uic.edu/~kbruzik/text/chapter6.htm|url-status=dead|archive-date=11 November 2013|work=University of Illinois at Chicago|access-date=10 November 2013}}</ref> | |||
:<math> K = e^{-\Delta G^\circ/RT},</math> | |||
where ''K'' is the equilibrium constant, Δ''G°'' is the difference in standard free energy between the two conformers in kcal/mol, ''R'' is the universal ] (1.987×10<sup>−3</sup> kcal/mol K), and ''T'' is the system's temperature in ]s. In units of kcal/mol at 298 K, | |||
:<math> K \approx 10^{-\Delta G^\circ/(1.36\text{ kcal}/\mathrm{mol})}. </math> | |||
Thus, every 1.36 kcal/mol corresponds to a factor of about 10 in term of equilibrium constant at temperatures around room temperature. (The "'''1.36 rule'''" is useful in general for estimation of equilibrium constants at room temperature from free energy differences. At lower temperatures, a smaller energy difference is needed to obtain a given equilibrium constant.) | |||
Three isotherms are given in the diagram depicting the equilibrium distribution of two conformers at different temperatures. At a free energy difference of 0 kcal/mol, this gives an equilibrium constant of 1, meaning that two conformers exist in a 1:1 ratio. The two have equal free energy; neither is more stable, so neither predominates compared to the other. A negative difference in free energy means that a conformer interconverts to a thermodynamically more stable conformation, thus the equilibrium constant will always be greater than 1. For example, the Δ''G°'' for the transformation of butane from the ''gauche'' conformer to the ''anti'' conformer is −0.47 kcal/mol at 298 K.<ref>The standard enthalpy change Δ''H''° from ''gauche'' to ''anti'' is –0.88 kcal/mol. However, because there are ''two'' possible ''gauche'' forms, there is a statistical factor that needs to be taken into account as an entropic term. Thus, Δ''G''° = Δ''H''° – ''T''Δ''S° ='' Δ''H° + RT'' ln 2 ''='' –0.88 kcal/mol + 0.41 kcal/mol = –0.47 kcal/mol, at 298 K.</ref> This gives an equilibrium constant is about 2.2 in favor of the ''anti'' conformer, or a 31:69 mixture of ''gauche'':''anti'' conformers at equilibrium. Conversely, a positive difference in free energy means the conformer already is the more stable one, so the interconversion is an unfavorable equilibrium (''K'' < 1). Even for highly unfavorable changes (large positive Δ''G°''), the equilibrium constant between two conformers can be increased by increasing the temperature, so that the amount of the less stable conformer present at equilibrium increases (although it always remains the minor conformer). | Three isotherms are given in the diagram depicting the equilibrium distribution of two conformers at different temperatures. At a free energy difference of 0 kcal/mol, this gives an equilibrium constant of 1, meaning that two conformers exist in a 1:1 ratio. The two have equal free energy; neither is more stable, so neither predominates compared to the other. A negative difference in free energy means that a conformer interconverts to a thermodynamically more stable conformation, thus the equilibrium constant will always be greater than 1. For example, the Δ''G°'' for the transformation of butane from the ''gauche'' conformer to the ''anti'' conformer is −0.47 kcal/mol at 298 K.<ref>The standard enthalpy change Δ''H''° from ''gauche'' to ''anti'' is –0.88 kcal/mol. However, because there are ''two'' possible ''gauche'' forms, there is a statistical factor that needs to be taken into account as an entropic term. Thus, Δ''G''° = Δ''H''° – ''T''Δ''S° ='' Δ''H° + RT'' ln 2 ''='' –0.88 kcal/mol + 0.41 kcal/mol = –0.47 kcal/mol, at 298 K.</ref> This gives an equilibrium constant is about 2.2 in favor of the ''anti'' conformer, or a 31:69 mixture of ''gauche'':''anti'' conformers at equilibrium. Conversely, a positive difference in free energy means the conformer already is the more stable one, so the interconversion is an unfavorable equilibrium (''K'' < 1). Even for highly unfavorable changes (large positive Δ''G°''), the equilibrium constant between two conformers can be increased by increasing the temperature, so that the amount of the less stable conformer present at equilibrium increases (although it always remains the minor conformer). | ||
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The effects of ] and ] interactions of the substituents as well as orbital interactions such as ] are responsible for the relative stability of conformers and their transition states. The contributions of these factors vary depending on the nature of the substituents and may either contribute positively or negatively to the energy barrier. Computational studies of small molecules such as ethane suggest that electrostatic effects make the greatest contribution to the energy barrier; however, the barrier is traditionally attributed primarily to steric interactions.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Liu|first=Shubin|title=Origin and Nature of Bond Rotation Barriers: A Unified View|journal=The Journal of Physical Chemistry A|date=7 February 2013|volume=117|issue=5|pages=962–965|doi=10.1021/jp312521z|pmid=23327680|bibcode=2013JPCA..117..962L}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Carey|first=Francis A.|title=Organic chemistry|url=https://archive.org/details/organicchemistry00care_486|url-access=limited|year=2011|publisher=McGraw-Hill|location=New York|isbn=978-0-07-340261-1|page=|edition=8th}}</ref> | The effects of ] and ] interactions of the substituents as well as orbital interactions such as ] are responsible for the relative stability of conformers and their transition states. The contributions of these factors vary depending on the nature of the substituents and may either contribute positively or negatively to the energy barrier. Computational studies of small molecules such as ethane suggest that electrostatic effects make the greatest contribution to the energy barrier; however, the barrier is traditionally attributed primarily to steric interactions.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Liu|first=Shubin|title=Origin and Nature of Bond Rotation Barriers: A Unified View|journal=The Journal of Physical Chemistry A|date=7 February 2013|volume=117|issue=5|pages=962–965|doi=10.1021/jp312521z|pmid=23327680|bibcode=2013JPCA..117..962L}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Carey|first=Francis A.|title=Organic chemistry|url=https://archive.org/details/organicchemistry00care_486|url-access=limited|year=2011|publisher=McGraw-Hill|location=New York|isbn=978-0-07-340261-1|page=|edition=8th}}</ref> | ||
] | ] | ||
In the case of cyclic systems, the steric effect and contribution to the free energy can be approximated by ]s, which measure the energy difference when a substituent on cyclohexane in the axial as compared to the equatorial position. | In the case of cyclic systems, the steric effect and contribution to the free energy can be approximated by ]s, which measure the energy difference when a substituent on cyclohexane in the axial as compared to the equatorial position. In large (>14 atom) rings, there are many accessible low-energy conformations which correspond to the strain-free diamond lattice.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1007/s40828-015-0014-0 |url=https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s40828-015-0014-0.pdf |title=Conformational analysis of cycloalkanes |year=2015 |last1=Dragojlovic |first1=Veljko |journal=Chemtexts |volume=1 |issue=3 |page=14 |bibcode=2015ChTxt...1...14D |s2cid=94348487 }}</ref> | ||
==Observation of conformers== | |||
==Isolation or observation of the conformational isomers== | |||
⚫ | The short timescale of interconversion precludes the separation of conformer in most cases. ]s are conformational isomers which can be separated due to restricted rotation.<ref>{{cite book|last=McNaught|title=IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology|year=1997|publisher=Blackwell Scientific Publications|location=Oxford|isbn=978-0967855097|chapter-url=http://goldbook.iupac.org/A00511.html|doi=10.1351/goldbook.A00511|chapter=Atropisomers}}</ref> The equilibrium between conformational isomers can be observed using a variety of ]. | ||
⚫ | ] also generates conformers which can be observed. The ] relates the dihedral angle of ] protons to their ] constants as measured by NMR. The equation aids in the elucidation of protein folding as well as the conformations of other rigid ] molecules.<ref>{{cite web|last=Dalton|first=Louisa|title=Karplus Equation|url=http://pubs.acs.org/cen/science/8151/8151karplus.html|work=Chemical and Engineering News|publisher=American Chemical Society|access-date=2013-10-27}}</ref> Protein side chains exhibit rotamers, whose distribution is determined by their steric interaction with different conformations of the backbone.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Dunbrack |first1=R. L. |last2=Cohen |first2=F. E. |title=Bayesian statistical analysis of protein side-chain rotamer preferences. |journal=Protein Science |date=1997 |volume=6 |issue=8 |pages=1661–1681 |doi=10.1002/pro.5560060807 |pmid=9260279 |pmc=2143774 |issn=0961-8368}}</ref> This is evident from statistical analysis of the conformations of protein side chains in the ]. | ||
⚫ | The short timescale of interconversion precludes the separation of |
||
===Spectroscopy=== | |||
⚫ | ] also generates |
||
⚫ | Conformational dynamics can be monitored by variable temperature ] spectroscopy. The technique applies to barriers of 8–14 kcal/mol, and species exhibiting such dynamics are often called "]". For example, in ], the two chair conformers interconvert rapidly at room temperature. The ring-flip proceeds at a rates of approximately 10<sup>5</sup> ring-flips/sec, with an overall energy barrier of 10 kcal/mol (42 kJ/mol). This barrier precludes separation at ambient temperatures.<ref name="eliel"/> However, at low temperatures below the ] point one can directly monitor the equilibrium by NMR spectroscopy and by dynamic, temperature dependent NMR spectroscopy the barrier interconversion.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Jensen|first1=Frederick R.|last2=Bushweller|first2=C. Hackett|date=1969-06-01|title=Separation of conformers. II. Axial and equatorial isomers of chlorocyclohexane and trideuteriomethoxycyclohexane|journal=Journal of the American Chemical Society|volume=91|issue=12|pages=3223–3225|doi=10.1021/ja01040a022|bibcode=1969JAChS..91.3223J |issn=0002-7863}}</ref> | ||
⚫ | |||
The dynamics of conformational (and other kinds of) isomerism can be monitored by ] spectroscopy at varying temperatures. The technique applies to barriers of 8–14 kcal/mol, and species exhibiting such dynamics are often called "]". | |||
Besides NMR spectroscopy, ] is used to measure conformer ratios. For the axial and equatorial conformer of bromocyclohexane, ν<sub>CBr</sub> differs by almost 50 cm<sup>−1</sup>.<ref name="eliel">{{cite book|last1=Eliel|first1= E. L.|last2= Wilen|first2= S. H.|last3= Mander|first3= L. N. |title=Stereochemistry Of Organic Compounds|publisher= J. Wiley and Sons|date= 1994 |isbn=978-0-471-01670-0}}</ref> | Besides NMR spectroscopy, ] is used to measure conformer ratios. For the axial and equatorial conformer of bromocyclohexane, ν<sub>CBr</sub> differs by almost 50 cm<sup>−1</sup>.<ref name="eliel">{{cite book|last1=Eliel|first1= E. L.|last2= Wilen|first2= S. H.|last3= Mander|first3= L. N. |title=Stereochemistry Of Organic Compounds|publisher= J. Wiley and Sons|date= 1994 |isbn=978-0-471-01670-0}}</ref> | ||
==Conformation-dependent reactions== | ==Conformation-dependent reactions== | ||
Reaction rates are highly dependent on the conformation of the reactants. In many cases the dominant product arises from the reaction of the ''less prevalent'' conformer, by virtue of the ]. This is typical for situations where the conformational equilibration is much faster than reaction to form the product. The dependence of a reaction on the stereochemical orientation is therefore usually only visible in ], in which a particular conformation is locked by substituents. Prediction of rates of many reactions involving the transition between sp2 and sp3 states, such as ketone reduction, alcohol oxidation or ] is possible if all conformers and their relative stability ruled by their ] is taken into account.<ref>Schneider, H.-J.; Schmidt, G.; Thomas F. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1983, 105, 3556. | Reaction rates are highly dependent on the conformation of the reactants. In many cases the dominant product arises from the reaction of the ''less prevalent'' conformer, by virtue of the ]. This is typical for situations where the conformational equilibration is much faster than reaction to form the product. The dependence of a reaction on the stereochemical orientation is therefore usually only visible in ], in which a particular conformation is locked by substituents. Prediction of rates of many reactions involving the transition between sp2 and sp3 states, such as ketone reduction, alcohol oxidation or ] is possible if all conformers and their relative stability ruled by their ] is taken into account.<ref>Schneider, H.-J.; Schmidt, G.; Thomas F. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 1983, 105, 3556. | ||
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ja00349a031</ref> | https://pubs.acs.org/doi/pdf/10.1021/ja00349a031</ref> | ||
One example |
One example where the rotamers become significant is ]s, which involve the simultaneous removal of a proton and a ] from vicinal or ''anti''periplanar positions under the influence of a base. | ||
] | ] | ||
The mechanism requires that the departing atoms or groups follow antiparallel trajectories. For open chain substrates this geometric prerequisite is met by at least one of the three staggered conformers. For some cyclic substrates such as cyclohexane, however, an antiparallel arrangement may not be attainable depending on the substituents which might set a conformational lock.<ref>{{cite web|title=Cycloalkanes|url=http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/local/organic/conf/c1_rings.html|publisher=Imperial College London|access-date= |
The mechanism requires that the departing atoms or groups follow antiparallel trajectories. For open chain substrates this geometric prerequisite is met by at least one of the three staggered conformers. For some cyclic substrates such as cyclohexane, however, an antiparallel arrangement may not be attainable depending on the substituents which might set a conformational lock.<ref>{{cite web|title=Cycloalkanes |url=http://www.ch.ic.ac.uk/local/organic/conf/c1_rings.html|publisher=Imperial College London|access-date=|first =Henry S. |last =Rzepa|date = 2014}}</ref> Adjacent ]s on a cyclohexane ring can achieve antiperiplanarity only when they occupy trans ] positions (that is, both are in axial position, one going up and one going down). | ||
One consequence of this analysis is that ''trans''-4-''tert''-butylcyclohexyl chloride cannot easily eliminate but instead undergoes substitution (see diagram below) because the most stable conformation has the bulky ''t''-Bu group in the equatorial position, therefore the chloride group is not antiperiplanar with any vicinal hydrogen. The thermodynamically unfavored conformation has the ''t''-Bu group in the axial position, which is higher in energy by (see ]) |
One consequence of this analysis is that ''trans''-4-''tert''-butylcyclohexyl chloride cannot easily eliminate but instead undergoes substitution (see diagram below) because the most stable conformation has the bulky ''t''-Bu group in the equatorial position, therefore the chloride group is not antiperiplanar with any vicinal hydrogen (it is gauche to all four). The thermodynamically unfavored conformation has the ''t''-Bu group in the axial position, which is higher in energy by more than 5 kcal/mol (see ]).<ref name="dougherty a value">{{cite book|last1=Dougherty|first1=Eric V. Anslyn |last2= Dennis|first2= A.|title=Modern Physical Organic Chemistry|url=https://archive.org/details/modernphysicalor00ansl|url-access=limited|year=2006|publisher=University Science Books|location=Sausalito, CA|isbn=978-1-891389-31-3|page=|edition=Dodr.}}</ref> As a result, the ''t''-Bu group "locks" the ring in the conformation where it is in the equatorial position and substitution reaction is observed. On the other hand, ''cis''-4-''tert''-butylcyclohexyl chloride undergoes elimination because antiperiplanarity of Cl and H can be achieved when the ''t''-Bu group is in the favorable equatorial position. | ||
{{multiple image | {{multiple image | ||
| align = center | | align = center | ||
| image1 = |
| image1 = Seven-atom interaction 1-(tert-butyl)-4-chlorocyclohexane.svg | ||
| width1 = |
| width1 = 230 | ||
| alt1 = | | alt1 = | ||
| caption1 = Thermodynamically unfavored conformation of ''trans''-4-''tert''-butylcyclohexyl chloride where the ''t''-Bu group is in the axial position exerting 7-atom interactions. | | caption1 = Thermodynamically unfavored conformation of ''trans''-4-''tert''-butylcyclohexyl chloride where the ''t''-Bu group is in the axial position exerting 7-atom interactions. | ||
| image2 = E2 |
| image2 = E2 1-(tert-butyl)-4-chlorocyclohexane.svg | ||
| width2 = |
| width2 = 500 | ||
| alt2 = | | alt2 = | ||
| caption2 = The ''trans'' isomer can attain antiperiplanarity only via the unfavored axial conformer; therefore, it does not eliminate. The ''cis'' isomer is already in the correct geometry in its most stable conformation; therefore, it eliminates easily. | | caption2 = The ''trans'' isomer can attain antiperiplanarity only via the unfavored axial conformer; therefore, it does not eliminate. The ''cis'' isomer is already in the correct geometry in its most stable conformation; therefore, it eliminates easily. | ||
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}} | }} | ||
The repulsion between an axial ''t''-butyl group and hydrogen atoms in the 1,3-diaxial position is so strong that |
The repulsion between an axial ''t''-butyl group and hydrogen atoms in the 1,3-diaxial position is so strong that the cyclohexane ring will revert to a ] conformation. The strain in cyclic structures is usually characterized by deviations from ideal ] (]), ideal ]s (]) or ] (Prelog) interactions. | ||
==Alkane stereochemistry== | |||
]]] | |||
Alkane conformers arise from rotation around ] hybridised carbon–carbon ]s. The smallest alkane with such a chemical bond, ], exists as an infinite number of conformations with respect to rotation around the C–C bond. Two of these are recognised as energy minimum (]) and energy maximum (]) forms. The existence of specific conformations is due to hindered rotation around sigma bonds, although a role for ] is proposed by a competing theory. | |||
The importance of energy minima and energy maxima is seen by extension of these concepts to more complex molecules for which stable conformations may be predicted as minimum-energy forms. The determination of stable conformations has also played a large role in the establishment of the concept of ] and the ability to predict the ] of reactions controlled by steric effects. | |||
In the example of staggered ] in ], a hydrogen atom on one carbon atom has a 60° '''torsional angle''' or '''torsion angle'''<ref name = torsion/> with respect to the nearest hydrogen atom on the other carbon so that ] is minimised. The staggered conformation is more stable by 12.5 ]/] than the ] conformation, which is the energy maximum for ethane. In the eclipsed conformation the torsional angle is minimised. | |||
]]] | |||
<div class="center">] ]</div> | |||
In ], the two staggered conformations are no longer equivalent and represent two distinct conformers:the '''anti-conformation''' (left-most, below) and the '''gauche conformation''' (right-most, below). | |||
] | |||
<div class="center">]]]</div> | |||
Both conformations are free of torsional strain, but, in the gauche conformation, the two ] groups are in closer proximity than the sum of their van der Waals radii. The interaction between the two methyl groups is repulsive (]), and an ] results. | |||
A measure of the ] stored in butane conformers with greater steric hindrance than the 'anti'-conformer ground state is given by these values:<ref>{{cite book|title =Organic Chemistry|edition = 6|last1= McMurry|first1= J.E.|publisher= Brooks Cole |year=2003|isbn = 978-0534000134}}</ref> | |||
* Gauche, conformer – 3.8 kJ/mol | |||
* Eclipsed H and CH<sub>3</sub> – 16 kJ/mol | |||
* Eclipsed CH<sub>3</sub> and CH<sub>3</sub> – 19 kJ/mol. | |||
The eclipsed ]s exert a greater steric strain because of their greater ] compared to lone ] atoms. | |||
] | |||
The textbook explanation for the existence of the energy maximum for an eclipsed conformation in ethane is ], but, with a C-C ] of 154 pm and a ] for hydrogen of 120 pm, the hydrogen atoms in ethane are never in each other's way. The question of whether steric hindrance is responsible for the eclipsed energy maximum is a topic of debate to this day. One alternative to the steric hindrance explanation is based on ] as analyzed within the Natural Bond Orbital framework.<ref>{{cite journal | last1=Pophristic | first1=Vojislava | last2=Goodman | first2=Lionel | title=Hyperconjugation not steric repulsion leads to the staggered structure of ethane | journal=Nature | volume=411 | issue=6837 | date=2001 | issn=1476-4687 | doi=10.1038/35079036 | pages=565–568 | pmid=11385566 | bibcode=2001Natur.411..565P | url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v411/n6837/abs/411565a0.html }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last=Weinhold | first=Frank | title=A new twist on molecular shape | journal=Nature | publisher=Springer Science and Business Media LLC | volume=411 | issue=6837 | year=2001 | issn=0028-0836 | doi=10.1038/35079225 | pages=539–541| pmid=11385553 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last=Weinhold | first=Frank | title=Rebuttal to the Bickelhaupt–Baerends Case for Steric Repulsion Causing the Staggered Conformation of Ethane | journal=Angewandte Chemie International Edition | volume=42 | issue=35 | date=2003-09-15 | issn=1433-7851 | doi=10.1002/anie.200351777 | pages=4188–4194 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/229639507}}</ref> In the staggered conformation, one C-H ] ] donates electron density to the ] of the other C-H bond. The energetic stabilization of this effect is maximized when the two orbitals have maximal overlap, occurring in the staggered conformation. There is no overlap in the eclipsed conformation, leading to a disfavored energy maximum. On the other hand, an analysis within quantitative ] shows that 2-orbital-4-electron (steric) repulsions are dominant over hyperconjugation.<ref>{{cite journal | last1=Bickelhaupt | first1=F. Matthias | last2=Baerends | first2=Evert Jan | title=The Case for Steric Repulsion Causing the Staggered Conformation of Ethane | journal=Angewandte Chemie | volume=115 | issue=35 | date=2003-09-15 | issn=0044-8249 | doi=10.1002/ange.200350947 | pages=4315–4320 | bibcode=2003AngCh.115.4315B | language=de}}</ref> A ] study also emphasizes the importance of steric effects.<ref>{{cite journal | last1=Mo | first1=Yirong | last2=Wu | first2=Wei | last3=Song | first3=Lingchun | last4=Lin | first4=Menghai | last5=Zhang | first5=Qianer | last6=Gao | first6=Jiali | title=The Magnitude of Hyperconjugation in Ethane: A Perspective from Ab Initio Valence Bond Theory | journal=Angewandte Chemie International Edition | publisher=Wiley | volume=43 | issue=15 | date=2004-03-30 | issn=1433-7851 | doi=10.1002/anie.200352931 | pages=1986–1990| pmid=15065281 }}</ref> | |||
===Nomenclature=== | |||
Naming alkanes per standards listed in the ] is done according to the ] for specifying angles (called either torsional or ]) between substituents around a single bond:<ref name =torsion>{{GoldBookRef|title=torsion angle|file=T06406| accessdate = 2015-10-29 }}</ref> | |||
] | |||
* a torsion angle between 0° and ±90° is called '''syn''' (s) | |||
* a torsion angle between ±90° and 180° is called '''anti''' (a) | |||
* a torsion angle between 30° and 150° or between −30° and −150° is called '''clinal''' (c) | |||
* a torsion angle between 0° and ±30° or ±150° and 180° is called '''periplanar''' (p) | |||
* a torsion angle between 0° and ±30° is called ''']''' (sp), also called '''syn-''' or '''cis-''' conformation | |||
* a torsion angle between 30° to 90° and −30° to −90° is called '''synclinal''' (sc), also called '''gauche''' or '''skew'''<ref name="GoldbookGauche">{{GoldBookRef|title=gauche|file=G02593| accessdate = 2008-02-27 }}</ref> | |||
* a torsion angle between 90° and 150° or −90° and −150° is called '''anticlinal''' (ac) | |||
* a torsion angle between ±150° and 180° is called ''']''' (ap), also called '''anti-''' or '''trans-''' conformation | |||
] or "Pitzer strain" refers to resistance to twisting about a bond. | |||
===Special cases=== | |||
In ], the terminal ] groups experience additional ]. | |||
Replacing hydrogen by ] in ] changes the stereochemistry from the zigzag geometry to that of a ] due to electrostatic repulsion of the fluorine atoms in the 1,3 positions. Evidence for the helix structure in the crystalline state is derived from ] and from ] and ] in solution.<ref>''Conformational Analysis of Chiral Helical Perfluoroalkyl Chains by VCD'' Kenji Monde, Nobuaki Miura, Mai Hashimoto, Tohru Taniguchi, and Tamotsu Inabe ]; '''2006'''; 128(18) pp 6000–6001; </ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{Wikiquote}} | {{Wikiquote}} | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
⚫ | * ] | ||
⚫ | * ] | ||
** ]s. | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* {{slink|Molecular Symmetry|Molecular nonrigidity}} | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
⚫ | * ] | ||
⚫ | * ] | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{ |
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Latest revision as of 08:30, 7 January 2025
Different molecular structures formed only by rotation about single bondsIn chemistry, rotamers are chemical species that differ from one another primarily due to rotations about one or more single bonds. Various arrangements of atoms in a molecule that differ by rotation about single bonds can also be referred to as different conformations. Conformers/rotamers differ little in their energies, so they are almost never separable in a practical sense. Rotations about single bonds are subject to small energy barriers. When the time scale for interconversion is long enough for isolation of individual rotamers (usually arbitrarily defined as a half-life of interconversion of 1000 seconds or longer), the species are termed atropisomers (see: atropisomerism). The ring-flip of substituted cyclohexanes constitutes a common form of conformers.
The study of the energetics of bond rotation is referred to as conformational analysis. In some cases, conformational analysis can be used to predict and explain product selectivity, mechanisms, and rates of reactions. Conformational analysis also plays an important role in rational, structure-based drug design.
Types
IUPAC definitionrotamer: One of a set of conformers arising from restricted rotation about one single bond.
Rotating their carbon–carbon bonds, the molecules ethane and propane have three local energy minima. They are structurally and energetically equivalent, and are called the staggered conformers. For each molecule, the three substituents emanating from each carbon–carbon bond are staggered, with each H–C–C–H dihedral angle (and H–C–C–CH3 dihedral angle in the case of propane) equal to 60° (or approximately equal to 60° in the case of propane). The three eclipsed conformations, in which the dihedral angles are zero, are transition states (energy maxima) connecting two equivalent energy minima, the staggered conformers.
The butane molecule is the simplest molecule for which single bond rotations result in two types of nonequivalent structures, known as the anti- and gauche-conformers (see figure).
For example, butane has three conformers relating to its two methyl (CH3) groups: two gauche conformers, which have the methyls ±60° apart and are enantiomeric, and an anti conformer, where the four carbon centres are coplanar and the substituents are 180° apart (refer to free energy diagram of butane). The energy difference between gauche and anti is 0.9 kcal/mol associated with the strain energy of the gauche conformer. The anti conformer is, therefore, the most stable (≈ 0 kcal/mol). The three eclipsed conformations with dihedral angles of 0°, 120°, and 240° are transition states between conformers. Note that the two eclipsed conformations have different energies: at 0° the two methyl groups are eclipsed, resulting in higher energy (≈ 5 kcal/mol) than at 120°, where the methyl groups are eclipsed with hydrogens (≈ 3.5 kcal/mol).
While simple molecules can be described by these types of conformations, more complex molecules require the use of the Klyne–Prelog system to describe the different conformers.
More specific examples of conformations are detailed elsewhere:
- Ring conformation
- Cyclohexane conformations, including with chair and boat conformations among others.
- Cycloalkane conformations, including medium rings and macrocycles
- Carbohydrate conformation, which includes cyclohexane conformations as well as other details.
- Allylic strain – energetics related to rotation about the single bond between an sp carbon and an sp carbon.
- Atropisomerism – due to restricted rotation about a bond.
- Folding, including the secondary and tertiary structure of biopolymers (nucleic acids and proteins).
- Akamptisomerism – due to restricted inversion of a bond angle.
Equilibrium of conformers
Conformers generally exist in a dynamic equilibrium
Three isotherms are given in the diagram depicting the equilibrium distribution of two conformers at different temperatures. At a free energy difference of 0 kcal/mol, this gives an equilibrium constant of 1, meaning that two conformers exist in a 1:1 ratio. The two have equal free energy; neither is more stable, so neither predominates compared to the other. A negative difference in free energy means that a conformer interconverts to a thermodynamically more stable conformation, thus the equilibrium constant will always be greater than 1. For example, the ΔG° for the transformation of butane from the gauche conformer to the anti conformer is −0.47 kcal/mol at 298 K. This gives an equilibrium constant is about 2.2 in favor of the anti conformer, or a 31:69 mixture of gauche:anti conformers at equilibrium. Conversely, a positive difference in free energy means the conformer already is the more stable one, so the interconversion is an unfavorable equilibrium (K < 1). Even for highly unfavorable changes (large positive ΔG°), the equilibrium constant between two conformers can be increased by increasing the temperature, so that the amount of the less stable conformer present at equilibrium increases (although it always remains the minor conformer).
Population distribution of conformers
The fractional population distribution of different conformers follows a Boltzmann distribution:
The left hand side is the proportion of conformer i in an equilibrating mixture of M conformers in thermodynamic equilibrium. On the right side, Ek (k = 1, 2, ..., M) is the energy of conformer k, R is the molar ideal gas constant (approximately equal to 8.314 J/(mol·K) or 1.987 cal/(mol·K)), and T is the absolute temperature. The denominator of the right side is the partition function.
Factors contributing to the free energy of conformers
The effects of electrostatic and steric interactions of the substituents as well as orbital interactions such as hyperconjugation are responsible for the relative stability of conformers and their transition states. The contributions of these factors vary depending on the nature of the substituents and may either contribute positively or negatively to the energy barrier. Computational studies of small molecules such as ethane suggest that electrostatic effects make the greatest contribution to the energy barrier; however, the barrier is traditionally attributed primarily to steric interactions.
In the case of cyclic systems, the steric effect and contribution to the free energy can be approximated by A values, which measure the energy difference when a substituent on cyclohexane in the axial as compared to the equatorial position. In large (>14 atom) rings, there are many accessible low-energy conformations which correspond to the strain-free diamond lattice.
Observation of conformers
The short timescale of interconversion precludes the separation of conformer in most cases. Atropisomers are conformational isomers which can be separated due to restricted rotation. The equilibrium between conformational isomers can be observed using a variety of spectroscopic techniques.
Protein folding also generates conformers which can be observed. The Karplus equation relates the dihedral angle of vicinal protons to their J-coupling constants as measured by NMR. The equation aids in the elucidation of protein folding as well as the conformations of other rigid aliphatic molecules. Protein side chains exhibit rotamers, whose distribution is determined by their steric interaction with different conformations of the backbone. This is evident from statistical analysis of the conformations of protein side chains in the Backbone-dependent rotamer library.
Spectroscopy
Conformational dynamics can be monitored by variable temperature NMR spectroscopy. The technique applies to barriers of 8–14 kcal/mol, and species exhibiting such dynamics are often called "fluxional". For example, in cyclohexane derivatives, the two chair conformers interconvert rapidly at room temperature. The ring-flip proceeds at a rates of approximately 10 ring-flips/sec, with an overall energy barrier of 10 kcal/mol (42 kJ/mol). This barrier precludes separation at ambient temperatures. However, at low temperatures below the coalescence point one can directly monitor the equilibrium by NMR spectroscopy and by dynamic, temperature dependent NMR spectroscopy the barrier interconversion.
Besides NMR spectroscopy, IR spectroscopy is used to measure conformer ratios. For the axial and equatorial conformer of bromocyclohexane, νCBr differs by almost 50 cm.
Conformation-dependent reactions
Reaction rates are highly dependent on the conformation of the reactants. In many cases the dominant product arises from the reaction of the less prevalent conformer, by virtue of the Curtin-Hammett principle. This is typical for situations where the conformational equilibration is much faster than reaction to form the product. The dependence of a reaction on the stereochemical orientation is therefore usually only visible in Configurational analysis, in which a particular conformation is locked by substituents. Prediction of rates of many reactions involving the transition between sp2 and sp3 states, such as ketone reduction, alcohol oxidation or nucleophilic substitution is possible if all conformers and their relative stability ruled by their strain is taken into account.
One example where the rotamers become significant is elimination reactions, which involve the simultaneous removal of a proton and a leaving group from vicinal or antiperiplanar positions under the influence of a base.
The mechanism requires that the departing atoms or groups follow antiparallel trajectories. For open chain substrates this geometric prerequisite is met by at least one of the three staggered conformers. For some cyclic substrates such as cyclohexane, however, an antiparallel arrangement may not be attainable depending on the substituents which might set a conformational lock. Adjacent substituents on a cyclohexane ring can achieve antiperiplanarity only when they occupy trans diaxial positions (that is, both are in axial position, one going up and one going down).
One consequence of this analysis is that trans-4-tert-butylcyclohexyl chloride cannot easily eliminate but instead undergoes substitution (see diagram below) because the most stable conformation has the bulky t-Bu group in the equatorial position, therefore the chloride group is not antiperiplanar with any vicinal hydrogen (it is gauche to all four). The thermodynamically unfavored conformation has the t-Bu group in the axial position, which is higher in energy by more than 5 kcal/mol (see A value). As a result, the t-Bu group "locks" the ring in the conformation where it is in the equatorial position and substitution reaction is observed. On the other hand, cis-4-tert-butylcyclohexyl chloride undergoes elimination because antiperiplanarity of Cl and H can be achieved when the t-Bu group is in the favorable equatorial position.
Thermodynamically unfavored conformation of trans-4-tert-butylcyclohexyl chloride where the t-Bu group is in the axial position exerting 7-atom interactions.The trans isomer can attain antiperiplanarity only via the unfavored axial conformer; therefore, it does not eliminate. The cis isomer is already in the correct geometry in its most stable conformation; therefore, it eliminates easily.The repulsion between an axial t-butyl group and hydrogen atoms in the 1,3-diaxial position is so strong that the cyclohexane ring will revert to a twisted boat conformation. The strain in cyclic structures is usually characterized by deviations from ideal bond angles (Baeyer strain), ideal torsional angles (Pitzer strain) or transannular (Prelog) interactions.
Alkane stereochemistry
Alkane conformers arise from rotation around sp hybridised carbon–carbon sigma bonds. The smallest alkane with such a chemical bond, ethane, exists as an infinite number of conformations with respect to rotation around the C–C bond. Two of these are recognised as energy minimum (staggered conformation) and energy maximum (eclipsed conformation) forms. The existence of specific conformations is due to hindered rotation around sigma bonds, although a role for hyperconjugation is proposed by a competing theory.
The importance of energy minima and energy maxima is seen by extension of these concepts to more complex molecules for which stable conformations may be predicted as minimum-energy forms. The determination of stable conformations has also played a large role in the establishment of the concept of asymmetric induction and the ability to predict the stereochemistry of reactions controlled by steric effects.
In the example of staggered ethane in Newman projection, a hydrogen atom on one carbon atom has a 60° torsional angle or torsion angle with respect to the nearest hydrogen atom on the other carbon so that steric hindrance is minimised. The staggered conformation is more stable by 12.5 kJ/mol than the eclipsed conformation, which is the energy maximum for ethane. In the eclipsed conformation the torsional angle is minimised.
In butane, the two staggered conformations are no longer equivalent and represent two distinct conformers:the anti-conformation (left-most, below) and the gauche conformation (right-most, below).
Both conformations are free of torsional strain, but, in the gauche conformation, the two methyl groups are in closer proximity than the sum of their van der Waals radii. The interaction between the two methyl groups is repulsive (van der Waals strain), and an energy barrier results.
A measure of the potential energy stored in butane conformers with greater steric hindrance than the 'anti'-conformer ground state is given by these values:
- Gauche, conformer – 3.8 kJ/mol
- Eclipsed H and CH3 – 16 kJ/mol
- Eclipsed CH3 and CH3 – 19 kJ/mol.
The eclipsed methyl groups exert a greater steric strain because of their greater electron density compared to lone hydrogen atoms.
The textbook explanation for the existence of the energy maximum for an eclipsed conformation in ethane is steric hindrance, but, with a C-C bond length of 154 pm and a Van der Waals radius for hydrogen of 120 pm, the hydrogen atoms in ethane are never in each other's way. The question of whether steric hindrance is responsible for the eclipsed energy maximum is a topic of debate to this day. One alternative to the steric hindrance explanation is based on hyperconjugation as analyzed within the Natural Bond Orbital framework. In the staggered conformation, one C-H sigma bonding orbital donates electron density to the antibonding orbital of the other C-H bond. The energetic stabilization of this effect is maximized when the two orbitals have maximal overlap, occurring in the staggered conformation. There is no overlap in the eclipsed conformation, leading to a disfavored energy maximum. On the other hand, an analysis within quantitative molecular orbital theory shows that 2-orbital-4-electron (steric) repulsions are dominant over hyperconjugation. A valence bond theory study also emphasizes the importance of steric effects.
Nomenclature
Naming alkanes per standards listed in the IUPAC Gold Book is done according to the Klyne–Prelog system for specifying angles (called either torsional or dihedral angles) between substituents around a single bond:
- a torsion angle between 0° and ±90° is called syn (s)
- a torsion angle between ±90° and 180° is called anti (a)
- a torsion angle between 30° and 150° or between −30° and −150° is called clinal (c)
- a torsion angle between 0° and ±30° or ±150° and 180° is called periplanar (p)
- a torsion angle between 0° and ±30° is called synperiplanar (sp), also called syn- or cis- conformation
- a torsion angle between 30° to 90° and −30° to −90° is called synclinal (sc), also called gauche or skew
- a torsion angle between 90° and 150° or −90° and −150° is called anticlinal (ac)
- a torsion angle between ±150° and 180° is called antiperiplanar (ap), also called anti- or trans- conformation
Torsional strain or "Pitzer strain" refers to resistance to twisting about a bond.
Special cases
In n-pentane, the terminal methyl groups experience additional pentane interference.
Replacing hydrogen by fluorine in polytetrafluoroethylene changes the stereochemistry from the zigzag geometry to that of a helix due to electrostatic repulsion of the fluorine atoms in the 1,3 positions. Evidence for the helix structure in the crystalline state is derived from X-ray crystallography and from NMR spectroscopy and circular dichroism in solution.
See also
- Anomeric effect
- Backbone-dependent rotamer library
- Cycloalkane
- Cyclohexane
- Gauche effect
- Klyne–Prelog system
- Macrocyclic stereocontrol
- Molecular configuration
- Molecular modelling
- Molecular Symmetry § Molecular nonrigidity
- Steric effects
- Strain (chemistry)
References
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- The standard enthalpy change ΔH° from gauche to anti is –0.88 kcal/mol. However, because there are two possible gauche forms, there is a statistical factor that needs to be taken into account as an entropic term. Thus, ΔG° = ΔH° – TΔS° = ΔH° + RT ln 2 = –0.88 kcal/mol + 0.41 kcal/mol = –0.47 kcal/mol, at 298 K.
- Rzepa, Henry. "Conformational Analysis". Imperial College London. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
- Liu, Shubin (7 February 2013). "Origin and Nature of Bond Rotation Barriers: A Unified View". The Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 117 (5): 962–965. Bibcode:2013JPCA..117..962L. doi:10.1021/jp312521z. PMID 23327680.
- Carey, Francis A. (2011). Organic chemistry (8th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 105. ISBN 978-0-07-340261-1.
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- ^ IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "torsion angle". doi:10.1351/goldbook.T06406
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- Pophristic, Vojislava; Goodman, Lionel (2001). "Hyperconjugation not steric repulsion leads to the staggered structure of ethane". Nature. 411 (6837): 565–568. Bibcode:2001Natur.411..565P. doi:10.1038/35079036. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 11385566.
- Weinhold, Frank (2001). "A new twist on molecular shape". Nature. 411 (6837). Springer Science and Business Media LLC: 539–541. doi:10.1038/35079225. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 11385553.
- Weinhold, Frank (2003-09-15). "Rebuttal to the Bickelhaupt–Baerends Case for Steric Repulsion Causing the Staggered Conformation of Ethane". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 42 (35): 4188–4194. doi:10.1002/anie.200351777. ISSN 1433-7851.
- Bickelhaupt, F. Matthias; Baerends, Evert Jan (2003-09-15). "The Case for Steric Repulsion Causing the Staggered Conformation of Ethane". Angewandte Chemie (in German). 115 (35): 4315–4320. Bibcode:2003AngCh.115.4315B. doi:10.1002/ange.200350947. ISSN 0044-8249.
- Mo, Yirong; Wu, Wei; Song, Lingchun; Lin, Menghai; Zhang, Qianer; Gao, Jiali (2004-03-30). "The Magnitude of Hyperconjugation in Ethane: A Perspective from Ab Initio Valence Bond Theory". Angewandte Chemie International Edition. 43 (15). Wiley: 1986–1990. doi:10.1002/anie.200352931. ISSN 1433-7851. PMID 15065281.
- IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (2006–) "gauche". doi:10.1351/goldbook.G02593
- Conformational Analysis of Chiral Helical Perfluoroalkyl Chains by VCD Kenji Monde, Nobuaki Miura, Mai Hashimoto, Tohru Taniguchi, and Tamotsu Inabe J. Am. Chem. Soc.; 2006; 128(18) pp 6000–6001; Graphical abstract