Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/hydrocarbons

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Bullvalene

Organic molecule (C10H10)

Bullvalene

Organic molecule (C10H10)

Bullvalene is a hydrocarbon with the chemical formula . The molecule has a cage-like structure formed by the fusion of one cyclopropane and three cyclohepta-1,4-diene rings. Bullvalene is unusual as an organic molecule due to the and bonds forming and breaking rapidly through Cope rearrangements; this property makes it a fluxional molecule.

Stereodynamics

The bullvalene molecule is a cyclopropane platform with three vinylene arms conjoined at a methine group. This arrangement enables a degenerate Cope rearrangement with the result that all carbon atoms and hydrogen atoms appear equivalent on the NMR timescale. At room temperature the 1H NMR signals average to a rounded peak at 5.76 ppm. At lower temperatures the peak broadens into a mound-like appearance, and at very low temperatures the fluxional behavior of bullvalene is reduced, allowing for 4 total signals to be seen. This pattern is consistent with an exchange process whose rate k is close to the frequency separation of the four contributing resonances. The number of possible valence tautomers of a bullvalene depends on the number of unique substituents. The number of isomers with ten distinguishable substituents is 10!/3 = 1,209,600.

:[[File:Bullvalene Cope.svg]]

Synthesis

In 1963, G. Schröder produced bullvalene by photolysis of a dimer of cyclooctatetraene. The reaction proceeds with expulsion of benzene.

In 1966 W. von Eggers Doering and Joel W. Rosenthal synthesized it by the photochemical rearrangement of *cis-*9,10-dihydronaphthalene.

Origin of the name

The name bullvalene is derived from the nickname of one of the scientists who predicted its properties in 1963 and the underlying concept of valence tautomerism, William "Bull" Doering. According to Klärner in 2011, the weekly seminars organised by Doering were secretly called "Bull sessions" by PhD students and postdocs and "were feared by those who were poorly prepared". The name was bestowed on the molecule, in 1961, by two of Doering's Yale graduate students, Maitland Jones Jr and Ron Magid. The name celebrates Bill Doering's well-known nickname and was chosen to rhyme with fulvalene, a molecule of great interest to the research group.

References

References

  1. Addison Ault. (2001). "The Bullvalene Story. The Conception of Bullvalene, a Molecule That Has No Permanent Structure". Journal of Chemical Education.
  2. (1974). "Comparison of 13C- and 1H- magnetic resonance spectroscopy as techniques for the quantitative investigation of dynamic processes. The Cope rearrangement in bullvalene.". Helv Chim Acta.
  3. (2024-09-18). "A guide to bullvalene stereodynamics". Chemical Science.
  4. Schröder, Gerhard. (1963). "Preparation and Properties of Tricyclo[3,3,2,04,6]deca-2,7,9-triene (Bullvalene)". Angewandte Chemie International Edition in English.
  5. (1966). "9,10-Dihydronaphthalene. Formation from Bullvalene and Nenitzescu's Hydrocarbon, Thermal Reorganization, and Photorearrangement to Bullvalene". J. Am. Chem. Soc..
  6. (2006). "Synthesis of Oligosubstituted Bullvalones: Shapeshifting Molecules Under Basic Conditions". [[J. Am. Chem. Soc.]].
  7. (1967). "Mechanistic Organic Photochemistry. XXIV. The Mechanism of the Conversion of Barrelene to Semibullvalene. A General Photochemical Process". [[J. Am. Chem. Soc.]].
  8. (2006). "Metal-Mediated Efficient Synthesis, Structural Characterization, and Skeletal Rearrangement of Octasubstituted Semibullvalenes". [[J. Am. Chem. Soc.]].
  9. Alex Nickon, Ernest F. Silversmith, ''Organic Chemistry: The Name Game: Modern Coined Terms and Their Origins'', [https://books.google.com/books?id=1jb9BAAAQBAJ&dq=barbaralone+ferrier&pg=PA133 p. 133], Pergamon Press, 1987.
  10. [http://fhs.mcmaster.ca/main/news/news_archives/ferrier.htm A tribute to professor emeritus Barbara Ferrier] {{Webarchive. link. (2017-01-02 , McMaster University, 6 January 2006)
  11. (March 2019). "A Rapidly Reversible Degenerate Cope Rearrangement : Bicyclo[5.1.0]octa-2,5-diene". [[Tetrahedron (journal).
  12. (2001). "The Bullvalene Story. The Conception of Bullvalene, a Molecule That Has No Permanent Structure". [[J. Chem. Educ.]].
  13. Author Ault (2001) also suggests the name stems from [[bullshit. BS]] because of an unimpressed grad student
  14. Klärner, F.-G. (2011), William von Eggers Doering (1917–2011). Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 50: 2885–2886. {{doi. 10.1002/anie.201100453
  15. Nickon, A.; Silversmith, E. F. Organic Chemistry: The Name Game; Pergamon: New York, 1972; p 131.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Bullvalene — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report