Baldwin's rules

{{Short description|Concept in organic chemistry}}

File:Baldwinregel1.svg

File:Baldwin rules for ring closure - 6-endo-tet cyclization.png

Baldwin's rules in organic chemistry are a series of guidelines outlining the relative favorabilities of ring closure reactions in alicyclic compounds. They were first proposed by Jack Baldwin in 1976.{{cite journal | author=Jack E. Baldwin | title=Rules for Ring Closure | journal = J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun. | issue=18 | pages= 734–736 | year=1976 | doi=10.1039/C39760000734 }}(Open access){{cite journal | last1 = Baldwin | first1 = J. E. | display-authors = etal | year = 1977 | title = Rules for Ring Closure: Ring Formation by Conjugate Addition of Oxygen Nucleophiles | journal = J. Org. Chem. | volume = 42 | issue = 24| page = 3846 | doi=10.1021/jo00444a011}}

Baldwin's rules discuss the relative rates of ring closures of these various types. These terms are not meant to describe the absolute probability that a reaction will or will not take place, rather they are used in a relative sense. A reaction that is disfavoured (slow) does not have a rate that is able to compete effectively with an alternative reaction that is favoured (fast). However, the disfavoured product may be observed, if no alternate reactions are more favoured.

The rules classify ring closures in three ways:

  • the number of atoms in the newly formed ring
  • into exo and endo ring closures, depending whether the bond broken during the ring closure is inside (endo) or outside (exo) the ring that is being formed
  • into tet, trig and dig geometry of the atom being attacked, depending on whether this electrophilic carbon is tetrahedral (sp3 hybridised), trigonal (sp2 hybridised) or diagonal (sp hybridised).

Thus, a ring closure reaction could be classified as, for example, a 5-exo-trig.

Reaction of methyl 4-hydroxy-2-methylenebutanoate according to Baldwin rules

Baldwin discovered that orbital overlap requirements for the formation of bonds favour only certain combinations of ring size and the exo/endo/dig/trig/tet parameters.

There are sometimes exceptions to Baldwin's rules. For example, cations often disobey Baldwin's rules, as do reactions in which a third-row atom is included in the ring. An expanded and revised version of the rules is available:The Baldwin Rules: Revised and Extended. Gilmore, K; Mohamed, R. K.; Alabugin, I. V. WIREs: Comput. Mol. Sci. 2016, 6, 487–514. http://wires.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WiresArticle/wisId-WCMS1261.html {{doi|10.1002/wcms.1261}}

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+Baldwin dis/favoured ring closures
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|type

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|tet

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|trig

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|dig

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The rules apply when the nucleophile can attack the bond in question in an ideal angle. These angles are 180° (Walden inversion) for exo-tet reactions, 109° (Bürgi–Dunitz angle) for exo-trig reaction and 120° for endo-dig reactions. Angles for nucleophilic attack on alkynes were reviewed and redefined recently.Gilmore, K.; Alabugin, I. V. Cyclizations of Alkynes: Revisiting Baldwin's Rules for Ring Closure. Chem. Rev. 2011. 111, 6513–6556. {{doi|10.1021/cr200164y}} The "acute angle" of attack postulated by Baldwin was replaced with a trajectory similar to the Bürgi–Dunitz angle by Alabugin and coworkers.Alabugin, I. Gilmore, K.; Manoharan, M. Rules for Anionic and Radical Ring Closure of Alkynes. J. Am. Chem.Soc. 2011, 133, 12608-12623, {{doi|10.1021/ja203191f}} This change, fully consistent with the stereoelectronic rules for nucleophilic addition at a pi-bond, reversed Baldwin's predictions for alkyne cyclizations. The combined body of experimental and computational data, not available to Baldwin, strongly supports the notion that exo-cyclizations are more favorable than endo-cyclizations for both alkenes and alkynes.

Applications

In one study, seven-membered rings were constructed in a tandem 5-exo-dig addition reaction / Claisen rearrangement:Li, X.; Kyne, R. E.; Ovaska, T. V. Synthesis of Seven-Membered Carbocyclic Rings via a Microwave-Assisted Tandem Oxyanionic 5-exo dig Cyclization−Claisen Rearrangement Process, J. Org. Chem., 2007, 72, 6624 {{doi|10.1021/jo0710432}}

:Image:5-exo-dig-reaction.png

A 6-endo-dig pattern was observed in an allene - alkyne 1,2-addition / Nazarov cyclization tandem catalysed by a gold compound:Guan-You Lin, Chun-Yao Yang, and Rai-Shung Liu. Gold-Catalyzed Synthesis of Bicyclo[4.3.0]nonadiene Derivatives via Tandem 6-endo-dig/Nazarov Cyclization of 1,6-Allenynes J. Org. Chem. 2007, 72, 6753-6757 {{doi|10.1021/jo0707939}}

File:6-endo-dig-reactionR (1).png

A 5-endo-dig ring closing reaction was part of a synthesis of (+)-Preussin:{{cite journal|doi=10.1021/jo00096a007|title=A Concise Synthesis of the Antifungal Agent (+)-Preussin|year=1994|last1=Overhand|first1=Mark|last2=Hecht|first2=Sidney M.|journal=Journal of Organic Chemistry|volume=59|issue=17|pages=4721–4722}}

:File:Preussin cyclization.png

Rules for enolates

Baldwin's rules also apply to aldol cyclizations involving enolates.{{cite journal|doi=10.1039/C39770000233|title=Rules for ring closure. Stereoelectronic control in the endocyclic alkylation of ketone enolates|year=1977|last1=Baldwin|first1=Jack E.|last2=Kruse|first2=Lawrence I.|journal=Journal of the Chemical Society, Chemical Communications|issue=7|pages=233}}{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/0040-4020(82)85023-0|title=Rules for ring closure: application to intramolecular aldol condensations in polyketonic substrates|year=1982|last1=Baldwin|first1=J|journal=Tetrahedron|volume=38|issue=19|pages=2939–2947}} Two new descriptors need to be defined: enolendo and enolexo, which refer to whether both carbons of the enolate C-C fragment are incorporated into the ring formed or not, respectively.

:Image:Baldwin rules enolates.png

The rules are the following:M. B. Smith, J. March, March’s Advanced Organic Chemistry: Reactions, Mechanisms, and Structure, 6th ed., Wiley-Interscience, 2007, {{ISBN|978-0-471-72091-1}}

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+Dis/favored ring closures for enolates
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|exo-tet

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|exo-trig

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Exceptions

These rules are based on empirical evidence and numerous "exceptions" are known.J. Clayden, N. Greeves, S. Warren, Organic Chemistry, 2nd ed., OUP Oxford, 2012, {{ISBN|978-0199270293}}J. E. Baldwin, J. Cutting, W. Dupont, L. Kruse, L. Silberman, R. C. Thomas. J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun., 1976, 736-738. {{doi|10.1039/C39760000736}}Finding the right path: Baldwin "Rules for Ring Closure" and stereoelectronic control of cyclizations. Alabugin, I. V.; Gilmore, K. Chem. Commun., 2013, 49, 11246 – 11250. http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlehtml/2013/cc/c3cc43872d Examples include:

  • cyclisations of cations
  • reactions involving third-row atoms, such as sulfur
  • Transition metal catalysis

References