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17 O NMR spectra of equatorial and axial hydroxycyclohexanes and 5‐hydroxy‐1,3‐dioxanes and their methyl ethers
Author(s) -
Eliel Ernest L.,
Liu Kwangting,
Chandrasekaran Subramanian
Publication year - 1983
Publication title -
organic magnetic resonance
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.483
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1097-458X
pISSN - 0030-4921
DOI - 10.1002/omr.1270210307
Subject(s) - chemistry , intramolecular force , cyclohexanol , chemical shift , stereochemistry , nmr spectra database , spectral line , hydrogen bond , proton nmr , alkane stereochemistry , crystallography , medicinal chemistry , molecule , organic chemistry , crystal structure , physics , catalysis , astronomy
17 O chemical shifts of axial hydroxyl groups in cyclohexanols are upfield of those of corresponding equatorial groups, but in 5‐hydroxy‐1,3‐dioxanes the opposite is observed: the axial OH resonates downfield of the equatorial OH. The situation is the same in the corresponding methyl ethers and is, thus, not a result of intramolecular hydrogen bonding in the axial 5‐hydroxy‐1,3‐dioxane, but appears to parallel the effect on 13 C and 19 F shifts observed in corresponding equatorial and axial 5‐methyl‐ and 5‐fluoro‐1,3‐dioxanes, which has been attributed to an upfield shifting effect of the antiperiplanar γ‐located heteroatoms. Surprisingly, the reciprocal effect is not seen in the ring 17 O shifts of the 5‐hydroxy‐1,3‐dioxanes. A δ compression shift is seen in the 17 O spectrum of trans ‐3,3,5‐trimethylcyclohexanol ( syn ‐axial OH and CH 3 ), analogous to the effect earlier reported in 13 C spectra. Conversion of four of the alcohols to methyl ethers produces a large upfield effect on the 17 O shift, larger in the cyclohexanols than in the 1,3‐dioxane‐5‐ols. Similar upfield shifts have been recorded in the literature; their extent depends on whether the alcohols are primary, secondary or tertiary.