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Kekulé versus Lewis: When Aromaticity Prevents Electron Pairing and Imposes Polyradical Character
Author(s) -
Trinquier Georges,
Malrieu JeanPaul
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.201403952
Subject(s) - unpaired electron , aromaticity , pairing , singlet state , character (mathematics) , electron , atomic orbital , open shell , chemistry , computational chemistry , conjugated system , electron pair , chemical physics , atomic physics , molecule , physics , quantum mechanics , organic chemistry , mathematics , superconductivity , geometry , polymer , excited state
Abstract Some conjugated alternant hydrocarbons, of singlet ground state according to Ovchinnikov’s rule, may exhibit strong polyradical character, despite admitting complete pairing of electrons in bond orbitals between adjacent atoms. Typical organizations of this kind are encountered in polycyclic frames supporting two or more extracyclic methylene groups. Lewis bond pairing would require quinonization of six‐membered rings, whereas safeguarding aromaticity proves sufficient to impose ground‐state open‐shell character, that is, the existence of unpaired electrons, providing the number of benzene rings to be quinonized is larger than two. Several examples built as variations around para ‐polyphenylene frames are examined through unrestricted DFT (UDFT) calculations, using various methods for spin decontamination of wavefunctions, geometries, and singlet–triplet energy gaps. They all illustrate how it is possible to conceive architectures that can be written with a closed‐shell bond pairing, although they exhibit a large number of unpaired electrons. The same analyses also apply to systems in which quinonization would not kill but only reduce the number of unpaired electrons.

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