Lithium-cation/pi complexes of aromatic systems. The effect of increasing the number of fused rings

J Am Chem Soc. 2003 Aug 27;125(34):10394-401. doi: 10.1021/ja029843b.

Abstract

The gas-phase lithium cation basicities (LCBs) of naphthalene, azulene, anthracene, and phenanthrene were measured by means of Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FT-ICR) mass spectrometry. The structures of the corresponding complexes and their relative stabilities were investigated at the B3LYP/6-311+G(3df,2p)//B3LYP/6-31G(d) level of theory. In the theoretical survey, pyrene, coronene, [3]phenylene, angular [3]phenylene, and circumcoronene were also included. The strength of the binding to a given aromatic cycle decreases as the number of cycles directly fused to it increases. Hence, the stability of the outer pi-complexes, in which Li(+) is attached to the peripheral rings, is systematically greater than that of the complexes in which the metal is attached to the inner rings. The energy gap between these local minima decreases as the number of fused rings in the system increases. This result seems to indicate that, as the size of the system increases, the rings tend to lose their peculiarities, in such a way that in the limit of a graphite sheet all rings would exhibit identical characteristics and reactivity. The good agreement between calculated LCBs and experimental values lends support to the enhanced stability of the outer complexes. The activation barriers connecting these local minima decrease as the number of fused cycles increases, but seems to tend toward a limit. [3]Phenylene and angular [3]phenylene exhibit enhanced LCBs reflecting nonnegligible Mills-Nixon effects that increase the electron-donor properties of these annelated benzenes.