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A few carbocations, such as tropylium and trityl (triphenylcarbenium) shown on the right, are sufficiently stable to form isolable salts with poorly nucleophilic anions, such as tetrafluoroborate (BF4(–) ). However, most carbocations are unstable and very reactive under normal laboratory conditions, so conventional studies of all but the most stable of these species have not been possible. Nevertheless, gas phase ionization energies of alkyl chlorides, hydride affinity measurements (gas phase), molecular orbital calculations, and low temperature nmr examination of ionized alkyl halides in mixed solvents composed of SbF5, SO2, SO2F2 & SO2FCl. (referred to as "super acids") have confirmed the qualitative relationship shown above. At low temperatures, 1H and 13C nmr spectra of (CH3)3C(+) and (CH3)2CH(+) were obtained and interpreted. The charged tricoordinant carbon atom exhibited a 13C signal over 300ppm downfield from TMS.
What are the factors that influence carbocation stability? The most common means of stabilizing an ion is by charge delocalization, either by inherent structural interactions or by solvation. As noted elsewhere, such structural interactions may usually be classified as inductive or resonance effects, and these may complement or oppose each other. Examples of both are given in the following diagram.
Alkyl groups have somewhat lower electronegativities and are more polarizable than hydrogen. If an alkyl group is bonded to the carbocation center, the electron pair of the C-C sigma bond will shift toward the positive charge, transferring a small part of that charge to the alkyl group. In the diagram on the left above, this inductive electron shift is designated by a light blue arrow head. Additional alkyl groups provide increased inductive charge dispersion, with each group assuming a share of the charge. Clearly, this analysis supports the stabilizing influence of alkyl substituents on carbocations.
Resonance stabilization by non-bonding electron pairs on adjacent heteroatoms is particularly strong, as shown on the right above. Such charge delocalization overcomes the potential inductive destabilization of these electronegative substituents. Similar stabilization is provided by an adjacent nucleophilic pi-electron function, such as a double bond. A phenyl substituent affords even greater charge delocalization than a double bond, as reflected by the position of a benzyl cation in the stability order. Resonance stabilization is generally stronger than inductive effects, and is the predominant factor stabilizing the tropylium and trityl cations.
Another way in which alkyl substituents stabilize carbocations is illustrated in the following diagram. This conjugative charge delocalization, called hyperconjugation, involves partial pi-bond formation to alpha-carbon atoms, provided suitably oriented C-H or C-C bonds are present. The small increase in stability of the 1-propyl cation compared with an ethyl cation, as noted above, suggests that C-C hyperconjugation provides slightly greater stabilization than does the C-H hyperconjugation shown here. Hyperconjugation by alkyl substituents also acts to stabilize unsaturated functional groups, as noted earlier for carbon-carbon double bonds.
Since hyperconjugation and the inductive effect act in the same manner, their relative importance in carbocation stabilization is a matter of interest. Some insight to this question is found in a group of novel compounds, bridgehead substituted bicyclic halides. Two examples of these compounds are shown below. The nomenclature of bridged bicyclic compounds identifies the length of the chains that connect the bridgehead atoms (colored pink here). Three connecting chains are present in a bicyclic compound, and the number of atoms in each chain (excluding hydrogen) is given as a number in brackets. If the chains are of different lengths the longest is listed first. One of the bridgehead atoms is numbered one, and the longest chain continues the numbering sequence until the second bridgehead atom is included. Numbering then continues along the next longest chain. The base name of the bicyclic compound reflects the total number of carbons, and is therefore the sum of the bridging chains plus two (the bridgehead atoms).
The bridgehead substituted halides shown above will form 3º-carbocations when ionized. Inductive stabilization of these cations should be similar to that of the tert-butyl cation, so if this were the predominant stabilizing factor from alkyl substitution, the reactivity of these halides should be similar to their tert-butyl counterparts. In practice, however, the bridgehead halides were found to be much less reactive. Indeed, 1-chlorobicyclo[2.2.1]heptane was recovered unchanged from prolonged treatment with hot ethanolic silver nitrate (a treatment that forces carbocation formation). The instability of such bridgehead carbocations has been attributed to the pyramidal shape forced upon the trigonal carbon (sp2 hybridized). However, covalent bonds are generally able to accommodate modest bending distortions without significant destabilization, and the inductive shift of electron pairs toward the positively charged carbon atom is unlikely to be impeded by a pyramidal configuration of the carbocation.
An alternative explanation is that hyperconjugation with the alpha-methylene groups is prohibited by the rigid configuration of these bridgehead cations. By clicking on the diagram above, an illustration of one possible C-H hyperconjugative interaction will be displayed. The carbon-carbon double bond implicit to this occurrence is badly twisted, and could not exist as such in any stable alkene. Structural prohibitions of this kind are encompassed in an empirical guideline called Bredt's rule.
On the other hand, C-C hyperconjugation may act to partially stabilize bridgehead carbocations. By clicking on the diagram a second time, two examples of such hyperconjugation will appear. While still relatively inert, the bicyclo[2.2.2]octane compound is roughly a million times more reactive than its bicyclo[2.2.1]heptane analog, shown above. This may be attributed to improved hyperconjugation, since the appropriate C-C bonds (colored red) are better aligned with a developing bridgehead carbocation. Furthermore, confirmation of expected changes in bond lengths resulting from such hyperconjugation has been obtained by X-ray diffraction analysis of a crystalline SbF6 salt of the adamantane cation. In this study, the red-colored bonds were lengthened and the green-colored bonds were shortened.