The α-effect is a term used to explain the dramatically enhanced reactivity of α-nucleophiles (R−Y−X:−) compared to their parent normal nucleophile (R−X:−) by deviating from the classical Brønsted-type reactivity-basicity relationship. The exact origin of this effect is, however, still heavily under debate. In this work, we have quantum chemically analyzed the α-effect of a set of anionic nucleophiles, including O-, N- and S-based normal and α-nucleophiles, participating in an SN2 reaction with ethyl chloride using relativistic density functional theory at ZORA-OLYP/QZ4P. Our activation strain and Kohn–Sham molecular orbital analyses identified two criteria an α-nucleophile needs to fulfill in order to show α-effect: (i) a small HOMO lobe on the nucleophilic center, pointing towards the substrate, to reduce the repulsive occupied–occupied orbital overlap and hence (steric) Pauli repulsion with the substrate; and (ii) a sufficiently high energy HOMO to overcome the loss of favorable HOMO–LUMO orbital overlap with the substrate, as a consequence of the first criterion, by reducing the HOMO–LUMO orbital energy gap. If one of these two criteria is not fulfilled, one can expect no α-effect or inverse α-effect.
CITATION STYLE
Hansen, T., Vermeeren, P., Bickelhaupt, F. M., & Hamlin, T. A. (2021). Origin of the α-Effect in SN2 Reactions. Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 60(38), 20840–20848. https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202106053
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