Issue 48, 2020

Flat corannulene: when a transition state becomes a stable molecule

Abstract

Flat corannulene has been considered so far only as a transition state of the bowl-to-bowl inversion process. This study was driven by the prediction that substituents with strong steric repulsion could destabilize the bowl-shaped conformation of this molecule to such an extent that the highly unstable planar geometry would become an isolable molecule. To examine the substituents' effect on the corannulene bowl depth, optimized structures for the highly-congested decakis(t-butylsulfido)corannulene were calculated. The computations, performed with both the M06-2X/def2-TZVP and the B3LYP/def2-TZVP methods (the latter with and without Grimme's D3 dispersion correction), predict that this molecule can achieve two minimum structures: a flat carbon framework and a bowl-shaped structure, which are very close in energy. This rather unusual compound was easily synthesized from decachlorocorannulene under mild reaction conditions, and X-ray crystallographic studies gave similar results to the theoretical predictions. This compound crystallized in two different polymorphs, one exhibiting a completely flat corannulene core and the other having a bowl-shaped conformation.

Graphical abstract: Flat corannulene: when a transition state becomes a stable molecule

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
19 Aug 2020
Accepted
16 Oct 2020
First published
22 Oct 2020
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2020,11, 13015-13025

Flat corannulene: when a transition state becomes a stable molecule

E. Solel, D. Pappo, O. Reany, T. Mejuch, R. Gershoni-Poranne, M. Botoshansky, A. Stanger and E. Keinan, Chem. Sci., 2020, 11, 13015 DOI: 10.1039/D0SC04566G

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