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Cycloalkene
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In organic chemistry, a cycloalkene or cycloolefin is a type of alkene hydrocarbon which contains a closed ring of carbon atoms and either one or more double bonds, but has no aromatic character. Some cycloalkenes, such as cyclobutene and cyclopentene, can be used as monomers to produce polymer chains.[1] Due to geometrical considerations, smaller cycloalkenes are almost always the cis isomers, and the term cis tends to be omitted from the names. Cycloalkenes require considerable p-orbital overlap in the form of a bridge between the carbon-carbon double bond; however, this is not feasible in smaller molecules due to the increase of strain that could break the molecule apart. In greater carbon number cycloalkenes, the addition of CH2 substituents decreases strain.[2] trans-Cycloalkenes with 7 or fewer carbons in the ring will not occur under normal conditions because of the large amount of ring strain needed. In larger rings (8 or more atoms), cis–trans isomerism of the double bond may occur. This stability pattern forms part of the origin of Bredt's rule, the observation that alkenes do not form at the bridgehead of many types of bridged ring systems because the alkene would necessarily be trans in one of the rings.
Examples
[edit]Nomenclature
[edit]Cycloalkenes follow a similar nomenclature system to alkenes, but the carbons are numbered starting at a carbon on the double bond and then through the double bond and around the ring.[3] This method is used to keep the index numbers small.
-
1-methylcyclohexene
-
3-methylcyclohexene
Properties
[edit]Cycloalkenes with a small ring have about 20° more bond angle strain than a cycloalkane of the same size.[4] This is because the bond angle for an alkene, C-C=C, is 122°, while the bond angle for an alkane, C-C-C, is 112°. When these carbons form a small ring, the alkene which has a larger bond angle will have to compress more than the alkane causing more bond angle strain.[4]
Cycloalkenes have a lower melting point than cycloalkanes of the same size. The lowered melting point is due to the double bond preventing the compound from compact packing.
Cycloalkenes generally reflect physical properties of their cycloalkane. In physical states, only the smaller cycloalkenes are gases while the others are mostly liquid. These molecules are also more reactive than cycloalkanes due to increased electron density shifts of the double bond. [5]
Trans isomers
[edit]As previously mentioned, cis-isomers of cycloalkenes exhibit more stability than trans-isomers; however, on an experimental and computational level, this property is only applicable to cycloalkenes with 10 carbons or less. As the number of carbons increase, the possibility of a trans-isomer occurring also increase.[2] The geometrical considerations as analyzed by computational analysis are as follows.
The most stable trans-isomers of 10 ring or greater cycloalkenes exhibit 4 irregularities from standard geometric norms. The first irregularity is twisted planes of substituents along the C=C. Using C=C as the stable axis, 2 substituents of 1 carbon can be visualized on the same plane, equally applied to the other carbon. These planes are not planar and instead one carbon substituent plane twists along the axis away or toward the other carbon’s plane. This twisting leads to pyramidalization forming a pyramidal alkene which is the second irregularity. A greater angle of twisting, usually results in lower carbon number rings and decreases as the carbon number increases. Pyramidalization is important in highered number rings, because it increases p-orbital overlap for stability, and reduces torsional strain.[2]
Bond length between the C=C and corresponding vinylic carbons also vary. In smaller cycloalkenes, it is expected for the bonds to be greater in length uniformly to account for increased strain, but for example, trans-cycloheptane has varying bond lengths. Also, the vinylic carbons on trans cyclohexanes exhibit longer bond lengths than their respective cis isomer for trans-cycloheptane through trans-cyclononene (7 carbon and 9 carbon cycloalkenes).[2]
Synthesis reactions
[edit]Ring-closing metathesis
[edit]Ring-closing metathesis switches out functional groups from one or multiple terminal alkenes to form a cycloalkene.[citation needed] This process can be used to form cycloalkenes of either E or Z configurations, depending on the stereochemistry of the second ring strain.[6]

Birch reduction
[edit]Birch reduction is a possible method to reduce reduces aromatic compounds into cycloalkenes, specifically cyclohexadiene.[7]

Diels-Alder reaction
[edit]The Diels-Alder reaction, also known as cycloaddition, combines a conjugated diene and an alkene to form cycloalkene. This is a concerted process, with bonds forming and breaking simultaneously.[7]

Cyclization reactions
[edit]Cyclization reactions, or intramolecular addition reactions, can be used to form cycloalkenes. These reactions primarily form cyclopentenones, a cycloalkene that contains two functional groups: the cyclopentene and a ketone group.[8] However, other cycloalkenes, such as Cyclooctatetraene, can be formed as a result of this reaction.[7]

Electrocyclic reactions
[edit]Reactions of conjugated double-bond systems can be synthesized into cycloalkenes through electrocyclic reactions.[9] Addition of heat or photolysis causes a reversible reaction that causes one pi bond to become a sigma bond, which closes the ring and creates a cycloalkene.[7]

Intramolecular McMurry reactions
[edit]When two carbonyl groups are coupled and undergo a McMurry reaction, there is a possibility of the formation of cycloalkenes under specific conditions.[7] When both carbonyls are within the same molecule and not sufficiently separated from each other, a cycloalkene can be formed through an intramolecular McMurry reaction.[7]

See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Zhang, Jingling; Li, Guofang; Sampson, Nicole S. (18 September 2018). "Incorporation of Large Cycloalkene Rings into Alternating Copolymers Allows Control of Glass Transition and Hydrophobicity". ACS Macro Letters. 7 (9): 1068–1072. doi:10.1021/acsmacrolett.8b00510. PMC 6156091. PMID 30271676.
- ^ a b c d Ouellette, Robert J.; Rawn, J. David (2014). "Alkenes Structures and Properties". Organic Chemistry. pp. 163–193. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-800780-8.00005-X. ISBN 978-0-12-800780-8.
- ^ "3.4: Alkenes, Cycloalkenes, and Alkadienes". Chemistry LibreTexts. 2014-11-26. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
- ^ a b "12.7: Cycloalkenes and Cycloalkanes". Chemistry LibreTexts. 2014-11-22. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
- ^ "Cycloalkenes". Organic Chemistry. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
- ^ "Olefin Metathesis". Chemistry LibreTexts. 2016-12-17. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
- ^ a b c d e f "Cycloalkenes - Chemgapedia". www.chemgapedia.de. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
- ^ "III. Intramolecular Addition (Cyclization) Reactions". Chemistry LibreTexts. 2015-01-12. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
- ^ "ELECTROCYCLIC REACTIONS". research.cm.utexas.edu. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
Cycloalkene
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Nomenclature
Definition and Examples
Cycloalkenes are non-aromatic hydrocarbons characterized by a ring of carbon atoms containing one or more carbon-carbon double bonds.[1] For monocyclic compounds with a single double bond, known as monocyclic monoalkenes, the general molecular formula is .[5] These compounds differ from cycloalkanes, which are saturated cyclic hydrocarbons with the general formula , lacking any double bonds.[4] They also contrast with cycloalkadienes and polyenes, which feature multiple double bonds within the ring structure.[6] Representative examples illustrate the diversity and varying stability of cycloalkenes, primarily influenced by ring size. Cyclopropene, with its three-membered ring, is highly unstable due to significant ring strain.[7] Cyclobutene, featuring a four-membered ring, is also strained and reactive. Cyclopentene, a five-membered ring, exhibits moderate stability suitable for common laboratory use. Cyclohexene, the six-membered analog, is the most stable and widely utilized cycloalkene in organic synthesis. Larger rings such as cycloheptene and cyclooctene demonstrate increasing stability with ring size, approaching that of acyclic alkenes.[1]Nomenclature
The nomenclature of cycloalkenes adheres to the substitutive system outlined in the IUPAC Recommendations for the Nomenclature of Organic Chemistry (Blue Book, 2013).[8] For unsubstituted monocyclic cycloalkenes containing a single double bond, the parent name is formed by adding the suffix "-ene" to the name of the corresponding cycloalkane, with the position of the double bond assigned locants 1 and 2; the locant "1" is omitted in the final name. Thus, the six-membered ring compound is named cyclohexene, which is a retained preferred IUPAC name (PIN). Similarly, cyclopentene and cycloheptene are retained PINs for their respective ring sizes. When substituents are present on a monocyclic cycloalkene, the carbon atoms of the double bond receive locants 1 and 2, and numbering proceeds around the ring in the direction that assigns the lowest possible locant to the substituent (or substituents) at the first point of difference. Substituents are cited as prefixes in alphabetical order, with their positions indicated. For instance, a methyl group attached to one of the double-bond carbons is named 1-methylcyclohexene, while attachment to an adjacent saturated carbon yields 3-methylcyclohexene; the alternative numbering that would give higher locants is avoided. In cases where substituents are on the double bond, the locant 1 is assigned to the substituted sp²-hybridized carbon to achieve the lowest set of locants overall. For cycloalkenes with multiple double bonds, the suffix is modified to "-diene", "-triene", or similar, and the locants for all double bonds are chosen to provide the lowest possible set when compared term by term. Numbering begins at one end of the conjugated or isolated system, proceeding around the ring to minimize the locants for the multiple bonds as a principal feature; substituents then receive the lowest possible locants. An example is cyclohexa-1,3-diene, preferred over cyclohexa-1,4-diene for the conjugated isomer due to the lower locant set (1,3 vs. 1,4). In bicyclic cycloalkene systems, nomenclature employs the von Baeyer system for bridged compounds, where the parent hydride name is "bicyclo[longest bridge.middle bridge.shortest bridge]alkane" (with "alkane" based on total carbons), followed by the suffix "-ene" and the locant for the double bond position, chosen to give the lowest possible number. For example, the bridged seven-carbon system with a double bond between positions 2 and 3 is named bicyclo[2.2.1]hept-2-ene; the trivial name norbornene is retained for general nomenclature but not as a PIN. Fused ring cycloalkenes, excluding fully aromatic systems, are named using indicated hydrogen nomenclature on the parent fused hydride (e.g., octahydro-1H-indene with specified double-bond positions), prioritizing lowest locants for unsaturations. While systematic names are preferred for complex structures, trivial names such as cyclohexene persist in common usage and are accepted as PINs for the parent compounds, facilitating a transition to fully systematic nomenclature for derivatives.Structure and Properties
Molecular Structure
Cycloalkenes consist of a closed ring of carbon atoms containing at least one carbon-carbon double bond, with the carbons involved in the double bond exhibiting sp² hybridization. This hybridization leads to a trigonal planar arrangement around these carbons, where the three sigma bonds lie in a plane with ideal bond angles of 120° between them. The cyclic structure imposes geometric constraints that often distort these ideal angles, particularly in smaller rings. For instance, in cyclopentene, the bond angle at each sp² carbon (C=C–C) measures approximately 123.9°, slightly wider than the ideal due to the effort to accommodate the ring closure while maintaining partial sp² character. Similarly, in cyclohexene, the corresponding C1–C2–C3 angle is 123.3°, reflecting minimal distortion in this medium-sized ring. These distortions arise from the need to balance the sp² geometry with the overall ring topology. In small rings like cyclopropene and cyclobutene, the pi bond is additionally strained due to misalignment of the p orbitals, reducing overlap efficiency.[9][10] The carbon-carbon double bond in cycloalkenes comprises a sigma bond formed by end-to-end overlap of sp² hybrid orbitals and a pi bond from sideways overlap of unhybridized p orbitals, resulting in a bond length of about 1.34 Å—substantially shorter than the typical C–C single bond length of 1.54 Å found in the saturated portions of the ring. In cyclopentene, the experimental C=C length is 1.335 Å, with adjacent C–C bonds at 1.508 Å; in cyclohexene, these values are 1.34 Å for C=C and 1.54 Å for C–C. The pi bond lies perpendicular to the local plane defined by the sp² carbons and their attached atoms, which in larger cycloalkenes aligns roughly perpendicular to the average plane of the ring.[9][10] To alleviate angle and torsional strain, especially in medium-sized rings, cycloalkenes adopt non-planar conformations. Cyclohexene, for example, features a half-chair arrangement where the double bond and adjacent carbons remain nearly coplanar, while the opposite side of the ring puckers out of plane, reducing eclipsing interactions between hydrogens. This puckering allows the sp³-hybridized carbons to approach tetrahedral angles closer to 109.5° without compromising the planarity required for effective pi orbital overlap.[11] For monocyclic cycloalkenes, the general structural formula is (where ), depicted as a ring of carbon atoms with one double bond and the remaining bonds being single, saturated with hydrogen atoms to satisfy valences. A representative structure is cyclohexene, shown below in a simplified line notation emphasizing the double bond integration: CH2
/ \
CH2 CH2
| |
CH=CH - CH2
CH2
/ \
CH2 CH2
| |
CH=CH - CH2
Physical Properties
Cycloalkenes exhibit boiling points that are generally comparable to or slightly higher than those of the corresponding cycloalkanes for medium-sized rings, attributed to the presence of the carbon-carbon double bond which marginally increases molecular polarity and intermolecular forces compared to the fully saturated analogs. For instance, cyclohexene has a boiling point of 82.5 °C, slightly above that of cyclohexane at 80.7 °C. However, this trend reverses in smaller rings, where the angle strain in cycloalkenes leads to lower boiling points; cyclopentene boils at 44.2 °C versus 49.3 °C for cyclopentane, and cyclobutene at 3.7 °C compared to 12.5 °C for cyclobutane. Melting points follow a similar pattern, with cycloalkenes often displaying lower values due to disrupted crystal packing from the rigid double bond; cyclohexene melts at -103.5 °C, well below cyclohexane's 6.5 °C. The densities of cycloalkenes are slightly higher than those of cycloalkanes, typically ranging from 0.8 to 0.9 g/cm³ at 20 °C, owing to the greater electron density around the double bond that enhances molecular compactness. For example, cyclohexene has a density of 0.811 g/cm³, exceeding cyclohexane's 0.779 g/cm³. Cycloalkenes are insoluble in water due to their nonpolar nature but readily dissolve in organic solvents such as ethanol, diethyl ether, and chloroform, facilitating their use in synthetic applications. In infrared (IR) spectroscopy, cycloalkenes display a characteristic absorption band for the C=C stretching vibration around 1650 cm⁻¹, which is medium-intensity and diagnostic for the presence of the alkene functionality. This band can shift slightly with ring size, appearing at higher wavenumbers (up to 1670 cm⁻¹) in smaller strained rings due to increased s-character in the double bond. Proton nuclear magnetic resonance (¹H NMR) spectroscopy reveals vinylic protons (those attached to the sp² carbons) at chemical shifts of 5-6 ppm, typically as multiplets reflecting coupling with adjacent allylic protons, providing a key identifier for the double bond position. Physical properties of cycloalkenes vary notably with ring size, particularly in volatility, where smaller rings (e.g., three- to five-membered) show increased volatility and lower boiling points relative to cycloalkanes because of ring strain that reduces effective intermolecular interactions. In larger rings (seven or more members), properties align more closely with acyclic alkenes, with boiling points and densities increasing steadily with molecular weight.Stability and Strain
The stability of cycloalkenes is significantly influenced by ring strain, which arises from deviations in bond angles, torsional interactions, and steric effects within the cyclic structure. Unlike acyclic alkenes, where sp²-hybridized carbons adopt ideal bond angles of 120°, cycloalkenes in small rings experience substantial angle strain as the double bond forces compressed geometries. This strain is particularly pronounced in three- and four-membered rings, elevating the ground-state energy and increasing reactivity. In larger rings, angle strain diminishes, but other factors come into play to determine overall stability. Angle strain in cycloalkenes primarily affects the sp² carbons, where the bond angles deviate markedly from 120°. For instance, in cyclopropene, the C–C=C bond angle is approximately 71°, representing a 49° deviation from the ideal and contributing to a total strain energy of about 228 kJ/mol. This high strain results from both the compressed geometry at the double bond and the inherent ring puckering limitations. In cyclobutene, the corresponding angle is around 90°, still causing notable distortion (30° deviation), though less severe than in cyclopropene. As ring size increases to five or six members, the angles at the sp² carbons approach the ideal 120°, measuring approximately 124° in cyclopentene and 123° in cyclohexene, minimizing angle strain and approaching acyclic-like geometries.[9][10][12] Torsional strain arises from eclipsed C–C bonds adjacent to the double bond, a feature common to small cycloalkenes due to their planar or near-planar conformations. In cyclopropene and cyclobutene, all vicinal hydrogens and bonds are fully eclipsed, adding 20–50 kJ/mol to the total strain, similar to but exacerbated by the sp² center. Cyclopentene exhibits moderate torsional strain from partial eclipsing in its envelope conformation, while cyclohexene adopts a half-chair form that allows staggered arrangements, effectively eliminating torsional contributions. In larger rings (n > 8), conformational flexibility reduces torsional strain, but steric repulsions between non-adjacent atoms can introduce transannular interactions, slightly destabilizing the structure compared to medium-sized rings. Optimal stability occurs in six-membered cycloalkenes, where angle and torsional strains are balanced at near-zero levels, making cyclohexene the least strained among common homologs.[13] The relative stabilities of cycloalkenes can be quantified through heats of hydrogenation (ΔH_hyd), which reflect the energy difference between the alkene and its saturated counterpart; more strained alkenes release greater energy upon saturation due to strain relief in the product. Compared to acyclic alkenes like 1-hexene (ΔH_hyd = –126 kJ/mol), small-ring cycloalkenes show more exothermic values, indicating higher instability and reactivity driven by strain alleviation. Cycloalkenes generally exhibit enhanced reactivity toward addition reactions versus acyclic analogs, as the transition state often involves partial strain relief not present in open-chain systems.| Cycloalkene | ΔH_hyd (kJ/mol) | Notes on Strain Relief |
|---|---|---|
| Cyclopropene | –224 | Extreme angle and torsional strain; highly reactive.[14] |
| Cyclobutene | –132 | Significant angle strain; more exothermic than acyclic.[15] |
| Cyclopentene | –113 | Minimal angle strain but some torsional; less exothermic, indicating relative stability.[15] |
| Cyclohexene | –118 | Near-zero strain; comparable to but slightly less exothermic than terminal acyclic alkenes.[15] |
| 1-Hexene (acyclic) | –126 | Unstrained reference; standard for monosubstituted alkenes.[16] |
