Dendralenes

April 11, 2016
Image of Dendralenes 3D Image of Dendralenes
Figure 1: [4]Dendralene
Image of Dendralenes 3D Image of Dendralenes
Figure 2: [5]Dendralene
Image of Dendralenes 3D Image of Dendralenes
Figure 3: [12]Dendralene

Like radialenes, last week’s molecules, dendralenes are polyolefins that are studied mainly for their synthetic methods and bonding properties. They consist of straight-chain alkanes that have an exo methylene group attached to each carbon atom. Thus, in all except the simplest one (butadiene), the double bonds are cross-conjugated.

Dendralenes are named for the number of double bonds they contain. The ones shown here are [4]-, [5]-, and [12]dendralene.

Up until this year, only the syntheses of dendralenes [3] through [8] had been reported. The earliest, [3]dendralene, was made in 1955. Now, chemists Michael S. Sherburn, Michael N. Paddon-Row, and colleagues at Australian National University (Canberra) and the University of New South Wales (Sydney)—the same researchers who synthesized [5]radialene—report the syntheses of dendralenes [9] through [12].

Like other olefins with conjugated double bonds, dendralenes readily undergo Diels–Alder cyclizations to produce complex molecules with additional double bonds that are available for creating even larger structures. Dendralenes can also undergo multiple insertions of methylene groups with reagents such as dibromomethane or diazomethane–zinc iodide to produce oligocyclopropanes.

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