The substituent effect on benzene dications
Date
2014-01-03Author
Palusiak, Marcin
Domagala, Malgorzata
Dominikowska, Justyna
Bickelhaupt, F. Matthias
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It was recently postulated that the benzene ring and its 4n + 2 p-electron analogues are resistant to the
substituent effect due to the fact that such systems tend to retain their delocalized character. Therefore, the
4n p-electron dicationic form of benzene should appear to be less resistant to the substituent effect, as
compared with its parent neutral molecule. For this reason the effect of substitution on the dicationic form of
benzene was thoroughly investigated and the consequences of single and double substitution (of para- and
meta-type) were assessed by means of several parameters, including various aromaticity indices and the
Substituent Effect Stabilization Energy (SESE) parameter. It is shown that, distinct from neutral benzene, its
dicationic form is much more sensitive to the substitution. However, the dicationic benzene itself, as a moiety
with a significant deficit of electrons, will be considered as a strongly electron-withdrawing centre, thus
interacting in a cooperative way with electron-donating substituents and in an anticooperative way with
electron-withdrawing substituents. Clear differences between singlet- and triplet-state dicationic forms of
benzene were also found. Triplet state structures seem to be significantly more delocalized, and as a
consequence less sensitive to the substituent effect than the singlet state structures. Finally, the para- and
meta-type substitution was investigated and it was found that the disubstituted dicationic benzene exhibits
significantly different behaviour from that of neutral benzene. Although the difference between para- and
meta-substitution can be found for dicationic benzene, the mechanism responsible for such an observation is
different from that present in neutral benzene. Finally, it is shown how and why double ionization of benzene
reduces its aromatic character in the singlet dication whereas aromaticity is essentially conserved in the triplet
dication. The above findings highlight that in the case of charged analogues of benzene the aromaticity
indices can be misleading and are to be used with great precaution.
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