Can the π−facial selectivity of solvation be predicted by atomistic simulation?
Can the π−facial selectivity of solvation be predicted by atomistic simulation?
Roberto BerardiA, Gianfranco CainelliB*, Paola GallettiB, Daria GiacominiB, Andrea GualandiB, Luca
Dipartimento di Chimica Fisica e Inorganica and INSTM, Università di Bologna, Viale Risorgimento 4,
40136 Bologna, Italy, and Dipartimento di Chimica “G. Ciamician”, Università di Bologna, Via Selmi
*[email protected], *[email protected]
ABSTRACT: This work is concerned with the rationalization and prediction of solvent and temperature
in n-pentane and n-octane at a number of temperatures and compare it with experimental selectivity data
for the nBuLi addition leading to syn and anti (2R)-2-phenyl-3-heptanol, which give non-linear Eyring
plots with the presence of inversion temperatures. We have found from simulations that the facial
solvation changes with temperature and alkane. Moreover, by introducing a suitable molecular chirality
index we have been able to predict break temperatures (TCI) for the two solvents within less than 20
degrees of the inversion temperatures experimentally observed in the diastereoselective nBuLi addition.
We believe this could lead to a viable approach for predicting inversion temperatures and other subtle
1
INTRODUCTION
It is well known that a number of chemical reactions can be affected by the medium in which the
reaction takes place and that solvents can change both equilibrium constants and reaction rates 1. The
effects of solvent on stereoselectivity have already been well described by organic chemists, and in
particular several examples of solvent dependent face-selectivity have been discussed 2. However, a
proper rationalization of these effects, and even more the possibility of predicting them from just
knowledge of the compounds involved, is far from being in sight. To date, the two most common
qualitative models employed to rationalize the reaction products of nucleophilic addition to α-chiral
carbonyls are based on two arguments that actually disregard the effect of the solvent, assuming that the
attack comes from the less sterically hindered direction, and that every aldehyde is at the same, fixed
conformation. These are the Cram’s model 3, predicting for this aldehyde a unique conformation in
which the double bond is flanked by the two smallest groups (H, CH3) attached to the chiral center, and
the most successful Felkin–Ahn model 4,5, which instead predicts in this simple case the double bond to
be flanked by the medium size group (CH3) and lying between the two bulkiest groups (CH3, Ph).
At a very simple level, the stereoselectivity is related, through the modified Eyring equation 6, to the
difference ΔΔG≠ on the free activation energies for the syn and anti reaction pathways leading to the two
diastereoisomers,
where S = [anti]/ [syn] is the stereoselectivity and k and k' are the overall rate constants for the synthesis
of the two stereoisomers. Many experimental results show a non-linear temperature dependence for the
selectivity, and a plot of lnS vs. 1/T often consists of two straight lines with different slopes
diastereoselectivity of α-chiral imines and carbonyl compounds, a case for which some of us have
reported several interesting temperature dependence of the diastereomeric excess (de%) of the products
2
in polar and nonpolar solvents. For the model reaction involving addition of BuLi to 2-phenyl-
propionaldehyde (scheme 1), the effect has been studied over a wide range of temperatures for various
cyclohexane, THF, tBuOMe, 1,4-dioxane) 8. While the ethers show a linear dependence of de% on the
temperature, all the alkanes present a break point at a certain temperature Tinv. In particular, for linear
alkanes it has been observed that: (i) the anti product is favored at all temperatures; (ii) the selectivity
decreases with the increase of temperature; (iii) the longer the solvent chain, the lower the diasterofacial
selectivity; (iv) the inversion temperature correlates with the melting point of the alkane.
These facts are not easy either to rationalize intuitively or to be predicted by using quantum modelling 9,
not only in the traditional “one molecule in vacuum approach”, but also using fixed conformation
continuum or discrete models with a few explicit solvent molecules to account for the solvent effect
10,11
. Indeed on one hand important differences in inversion temperatures are found in different linear
alkanes with essentially the same dielectric constant and, on the other, the good conformational
sampling in an equilibrium condensed phase that would be necessary to undertake the task is beyond the
Some examples have been reported for enantio- or diastereoselective reactions, where different reaction
solvents are able to drive the diastereofacial selectivity 13; the solvent plays a fundamental role as only
small differences in activation enthalpies of the two diastereomeric transition states are expected. The
presence of a Tinv would thus depend on dynamic solvation effects and represents the interconversion
temperature of two different solvation clusters which act as two different supramolecules with different
stereoselectivities. The dynamic solvent effects have been confirmed by temperature dependent studies
13
of the C NMR, CD and UV spectra of some solvated aldehydes in the absence of any reaction,
revealing the presence of peculiar temperatures TCD, TUV, and TNMR, whose values are identical and
match with experimentally found Tinv 14, thus supporting its solvent-dependent nature.
3
To confirm this interpretation and establish its microscopical origin as well as to try to develop a
predictive approach, we have decided to study the solvation of (R)-2-phenyl propionaldehyde in two
solvents at first glance very similar: n-pentane and n-octane. The present paper is divided into two parts.
addition reaction of n-BuLi to (R)-2-phenyl propionaldehyde: while data for the racemic aldehyde were
already available 8, here we have obtained experimental data for the (R) enantiomer in n-pentane and in
n-octane in a wide range of temperatures. In the second part we study, with the help of the molecular
dynamics (MD) technique15, 16, the temperature dependence of diastereosolvation in n-pentane and n-
octane and we introduce some tools for following the change in solvation and, to some extent, to predict
EXPERIMENTAL PART
Optically pure (R)-2-phenyl propionaldehyde was prepared accordingly to the procedure reported in the
17
literature by means of oxidation of (R)-2-phenyl-propanol with the Dess-Martin periodinane (see
scheme 1).
Ph Ph
periodinane
OH Me
Me
1 O
n-pentane or Ph Ph
n-octane Bu Bu
1 + nBuLi Me + Me
Temperature OH OH
1a 1b
anti syn
Scheme 1. The one step synthesis followed to prepare the chiral aldehyde 1
and the nucleophilic addition reaction conditions.
In all experiments the addition reaction was performed by introducing nBuLi into aldehyde 1 diluted in
anhydrous n-pentane or n-octane at constant temperature (see supporting information). The temperature
value was varied over a range of approx. 120 K. The reactions proceeded smoothly to give anti (1a) and
syn (1b) alcohols (scheme 1). The diastereomeric ratio [anti]/[syn] was determined in each experiment
by GC analysis of the corresponding trimethylsilylethers and results are reported as Supporting
Information. The data for ln (anti/syn) versus 1/T were analyzed by a linear least-squares fitting to the
Eyring equation and for each data set a residual analysis was applied to evaluate the number of linear
4
trends and to ascertain the presence of an inversion temperature. More specifically, the inversion
temperature has been first estimated by fitting the complete {lnSi , 1/Ti } data set (ordered with
increasing values of 1/T) with a single regression line. The data pair corresponding to the largest
absolute value residual has been used to partition the data set into left and right subsets, with the
dividing point assigned to the left subset. The two groups of points have then been separately fitted with
a least squares straight line. The intersection of these regression curves gives the estimated inversion
temperature, while the differences ΔΔH≠ and ΔΔS≠ were obtained from the slopes and the intercepts of
these linear plots (Table 1). The thermodynamic parameters are quite different in the two solvents. In
particular in pentane, where little values of ΔΔH≠ resulted, the differential activation entropy represents
the main contribution to stereoselectivity.
T>Tinv T<Tinv
Pentane 204 -0.33 ± 0.06 +1.2 ± 0.2 +0.46 ± 0.14 +5.2 ± 0.7
Octane 288 -1.0 ± 0.1 -1.0 ± 0.4 -0.58 ± 0.04 +0.6 ± 0.2
Table 1. Differential activation parameters ΔΔH≠, ΔΔS≠ and inversion temperature Tinv for nBuLi addition to aldehyde 1
in n-pentane and n-octane as obtained from linear regression analysis of the experimental data.
The Eyring plots in figure 1 show the inverse temperature dependence of lnS to 1 in n-pentane and n-
octane. Notwithstanding the little variation of the diastereomeric ratio [anti]/[syn] with 1/T, the plots
show for n-pentane an inversion temperature (Tinv) at 204 K, suggesting the presence of two different
kinds of solute-solvent clusters: one above and one below Tinv. A similar behavior, although less
evident, is observed using n-octane as the solvent, with the anti diastereoisomer being favored at all
temperatures.
5
Figure 1. Eyring plots for the diastereomeric ratio obtained in the addition of nBuLi to aldehyde 1 in pure n-pentane (left)
and n-octane (right). The two linear regression curves, obtained as described in the text, and the inversion temperature are
shown together with the experimental results (circles).
COMPUTER SIMULATIONS
Our aim here is to investigate the existence of differences at molecular level in the solvation of the
aldehyde in the two alkanes studied experimentally, via extensive molecular dynamics simulations at
15, 16
atomistic level . In practice, we have explicitly simulated (R)-2-phenyl-propionaldehyde in n-
pentane and n-octane, examining the distribution of solvent molecules around the solute and the
properties of the chiral solute in this explicit medium. To do this, we have described the n-alkane
18
solvent with the NERD united-atoms Force Field (FF) which was specifically developed for
19
hydrocarbons, while the solute has been modeled by suitably modifying the OPLS-AMBER FF by
adding specifically derived point charges and by changing a torsional term. As the description of
aldehyde torsion with respect to the bond CHO-C* is of fundamental importance in determining the
conformations of the solute and the reaction products, we have performed first a preliminary test of the
standard AMBER FF, by a comparison with quantum mechanical calculations at Hartree-Fock 6-31G*
20
level for the torsional potential. This has shown that the standard FF gives a description of the φ1
torsion that is even qualitatively incorrect (figure 2) and, consequently, we have replaced the relevant
6
Ph
H Me H Ph
Me R O O O
O
Ph H Me Ph H Me
H H H
A B C
Figure 2. Definition of the torsional angles φi (left) and a plot of the torsional potential for the rotation around the CHO-C*
bond (right) of (R)-2-phenyl-propionaldehyde as obtained from various levels of theory: original AMBER FF (black, long
dashed), HF/6-31G* (black, short dashed), B3LYP/cc-pVDZ (red, thick line) used for parametrizing the new force field
torsional term (blue dots, calculated in vacuum). The Newman projections of the minimal energy conformers are also shown.
The molecular geometry was optimized with the B3LYP density functional (DFT) using Dunning
correlation consistent polarized valence double zeta (cc-pVDZ) basis set20, and electrostatic-potential
fitting atomic charges were also calculated and added to the force field. At the same level of theory, and
for 24 conformations corresponding to uniformly spaced torsional angles in the range –180o <φ1<180o,
the molecular structure was then relaxed while keeping fixed φ1 at the desired value, thus obtaining a
reference torsional energy profile (red curve in figure 2 and Table B in the Supporting Information).
This overall DFT potential contains non-bonded contributions terms which in the AMBER type FF are
given separately, and that have thus to be accounted for to avoid counting them twice in the simulation.
In practice, the contribution Unb(φ1) of the non-bonded terms to the FF has been calculated from the
logarithm of the “non-bonded” torsional angular distribution Pnb(φ1) obtained from an MD simulation of
an isolated molecule at 1000 K, in which the FF torsional potential was fixed to zero (Unb=-kBT lnPnb). B
The rationale of the method is that, at this high temperature, the conformations corresponding to all
7
angles are populated, and consequently a good conformational sampling can be achieved. The
difference between the DFT and the nonbonded torsional potential has then been fitted with a truncated
Fourier series expansion (six cosine and three sine terms) that has been used as the new FF torsional
21
potential (see e.g. ref. ). We have verified the new force field torsional potential by two 600 ns
simulations in vacuum at the temperatures of 270 and 320 K; the agreement with the original DFT
potential is good (root mean square deviation: 0.14 kcal/mol) and the discrepancies are due to the
limited number of Fourier series terms used in the force field for torsion φ1.
The torsional potential obtained, which is in excellent agreement with recently published calculations
22
and free jet millimeter-wave absorption spectroscopy experimental data , shows three minima
corresponding to the preferred conformers. The most stable one, labeled A in figure 2, is the one with
the carbonyl oxygen eclipsing the methyl group, while the conformer corresponding to the eclipsed
hydrogen (B) is found to be less stable of about 1.4 kcal/mol and the conformer with the eclipsed phenyl
propionaldehyde molecule, and 50 surrounding solvent molecules using ORAC, a multiple time-step
23
code developed by Procacci et al. . This relatively small sample, contained in a periodic cubic box
kept at atmospheric pressure, is sufficient to describe well the first solvation sphere and partially the
second, as we have verified with additional simulations performed on larger samples containing 250
molecules of pentane at the temperature of 270 K and of octane at the temperature of 320 K (see figure
6). The temperature ranges, 170-270 K for n-pentane and 220-320 K for n-octane, have been chosen
since they are sufficiently large to enclose the experimental inversion temperatures. The systems
24
investigated required around 5 ns to equilibrate: a reasonable time for a system composed of
25
relatively simple molecules moving in low viscosity isotropic solvents . Following the equilibration
stage we have performed very long production runs of about 300 nanoseconds to get sufficiently good
statistics. We have monitored the torsional angle φ1 as function of time and verified that under these
8
conditions the sampling during the MD production runs is adequate to acquire statistically significant
In view of assessing the molecular origin of the experimental diastereoselectivity, we have started
comparing the conformational distributions around the CHO-C* bond (torsional angle φ1) as computed
from the MD trajectories for the pentane and octane solvents at the highest and lowest temperatures
studied with the distributions calculated from a simulation of the aldehyde in vacuum (figure 3). We see
that in both solvents the conformations of type A are more probable than in vacuum (i.e. are stabilized
by the alkane); the conformations of type C and B are correspondingly destabilized, while the order of
the conformational energies is preserved (A<B<C). The low temperature distributions (black curves)
show that almost uniquely the conformation of type A is present in these thermodynamic conditions.
Figure 3: Normalized conformational distributions P(φ1) in pentane (left) and octane (right) at the lowest (black) and highest
(red) MD simulation temperatures, compared with the distribution obtained form a 600 ns MD NVT simulation of the
To measure more quantitatively both solvent and temperature effects on the molecular structure, we
have considered the mean squared angular fluctuations of the acyl, methyl and phenyl groups (figure 4),
that have been computed as the average <(Δφi)2 > at coarse grained intervals Δt of one picosecond for
each temperature. Not surprisingly, the mean squared fluctuations increase linearly with temperature
and their slopes provide an estimate of a local “torsional diffusion coefficient”. However an evident
jump in the curves is observed when changing solvent from pentane to octane (at 220 K): this is again
9
consistent with a change in the local mobility due to a modification in solvation, with octane allowing
Figure 4: Mean squared angular fluctuations <(Δφi)2 > in pentane (left, 170-270 K) and octane (right, 220-320 K) solutions,
calculated for rotations of the acyl (φ1, squares), methyl (φ2, circles) and phenyl (φ3, boxes) groups.
Having verified that solvent effects are present, we have examined if our data support the existence of
solvation with temperature that can on one hand be obtained from the MD simulations, and on the other
We start by examining the solvent structuring around the carbonyl through one of the many atom-atom
radial distribution functions that can be defined. In particular, we calculate the distribution g0(r) of the
distances between the carbonyl carbon taken at the center and each of the united atoms belonging to
1 (2)
g 0 (r ) = δ (r − rij ) ,
4π r 2 ρ ij
where rij is the carbon-solvent distance and ρ=N/V is the number density.
The results for g0(r) are plotted in figure 5. We see a local structuring of the solvent, more pronounced
in pentane than in octane, where the first and second peak of g0(r) are actually quite similar; as already
mentioned, we notice that the samples sizes we have used are sufficient to allow for the formation of
10
two solvation spheres. Test runs on larger samples with N=250 solvent molecules show that no further
Figure 5: The radial distribution function g0(r) around the carbonylic carbon and the average number of CHn centers N(r) in
pentane and octane calculated from the highest and lowest temperature MD simulation trajectories. We also show the radial
distribution function calculated from simulations of a larger sample with 250 solvent molecules (blue dotted lines).
Regarding the effect of temperature, we notice that an increase of temperature of 100 K, from well
below to well above the experimentally observed inversion temperature, broadens the peaks of g0(r), but
is not sufficient to modify the extent of the local, short range order. In addition, for both solvents the
shape of the radial distribution changes very little in the simulated temperature interval.
Figure 6: Snapshot of the united atom pentane molecules partially or totally contained in the first solvation sphere around
the carbonyl carbon (pentane, 180 K) with the definition of positive and negative faces of the carbonyl. Solvent atoms have
been rendered 5 times smaller than the actual size to increase visibility.
11
Since the standard radial distribution depends only on distance it cannot be used to discriminate
between atoms above or below the aldehyde plane. Thus, in order to try to quantify the facial selectivity
of solvation, we have modified this indicator by defining a specific parameter s = (n ⋅ rij ) / | n ⋅ rij | , where
n is the normal to the plane identified by the three atoms of the acyl group. This plane is defined so that
s is positive on the face of the π carbonyl bond leading under nucleophilic attack to an anti product, and
We have then distinguished the two contributions to the total radial distribution function according
the sign of s and computed the density distribution g0(sr) around the two faces:
1
g 0 (s r ) = sδ (r − rij ) . (3)
2π r 2 ρ ij
These g0(sr) curves (figure 7) show clearly that the solvation is strongly facial selective, with the
positive side being on average more populated than the negative one at every temperature studied. It is
also possible to introduce a solvation radius for each face of the π bond, defined as the position of the
first minimum of the distribution function: the ratio of these distances is solvent dependent and changes
with temperature, as shown in figure 8. We find that the solvation radius measured for the positive face
(empty and filled red squares) is always smaller than one measured for the negative face (empty and
filled blue circles), in spite of the former region being more populated: we see that the solvation is
strongly face-selective and the positive face is surrounded by a more structured solvent cage. All radii
plotted in figure 8 show some discontinuity in their temperature dependence: in principle this might be
related to the experimental inversion temperatures, but we have found these data not sensitive enough to
be used for a recovery of the experimental result. The number of united atoms centers N(sr) for the two
faces does not change significantly with temperature (figures 5 and 7), and the positive face is always
more solvated: this is reflected in the experimental outcome that the anti product is favored at all
temperatures.
12
Figure 7: The face-dependent radial distribution function g0(sr) around the carbonylic carbon and the corresponding number
Figure 8: Radii of the first solvation shell for the carbonyl carbon of the aldehyde in pentane (empty symbols) and octane
(filled symbols), as estimated from the g0(sr) distribution: face independent (black triangles), positive face (red squares), and
We are still left with problem of finding an observable that is sensitive enough to changes in solute
the solvated aldehyde [14] that the inversion temperatures are directly connected to dynamic solute-
solvent clustering effects, and since it is reasonable to suppose that the diasteroselectivity might depend
on the degree of chirality of the chiral reactant, we have examined as a candidate indicator of selectivity
change the average chirality of (R)-2-phenyl propionaldehyde, as a function of temperature and solvent
nature. There are of course many quantitative estimators of molecular chirality, based on different
13
26, 27, 28
operational definitions of chirality or on the choice of different molecular observables (for a
recent review see 29 ). Here we are not concerned with spectroscopic properties like CD itself or optical
rotation, but rather with an indicator of the effective (conformationally averaged) chirality in molecular
shape as relevant to solute-solvent interactions. Thus we have chosen to calculate a chiral index that
has already been successfully used in tackling problems connected with effects of solute chirality,
particularly in theoretical studies of helical twisting power, i.e. of the effectiveness of a chiral solute in
30, 31
generating a twisted (cholesteric) phase when dissolved in a nematic solvent . This molecular
G0 S = 4!/(3 N 4 ) ∑ Pˆijkl {mi m j mk ml ⎡⎣(rij × rkl ) ⋅ ril ⎤⎦ (rij ⋅ r jk )(r jk ⋅ rkl ) / ⎡⎣ (rij rjk rkl ) 2 ril ⎤⎦} ,
{ } (4)
{ijkl }
where rij =ri-rj is an interatomic vector and ri, mi the position and mass in atomic units of the i-th atom.
The summation is performed over all different sets of four atoms {ijkl} out of the N atoms in the
molecule, while P̂ijkl {Aijk} is an operator generating a sum over all the permutations of i, j, k, l . The
index G0S assigns to each observed molecular conformation a measure of chirality obtained as a mass-
weighted degree of asymmetry of the atomic coordinates, with a sign that can be used for a right/left
classification 26,27. We report in figure 9 the logarithm of the conformationally averaged value of <G0S>
obtained from simulation trajectories. We see that the conformationally averaged solute chirality
decreases with T, and that it is systematically higher in pentane than in octane (possibly an effect of
temperature). In figure 9 we also see a clear evidence of two regions with distinct chiral index vs
temperature slopes. From these results a break temperature (named TCI) can be determined with the
same algorithm described in the experimental section. It is gratifying to see that the break temperatures
obtained (223 K in pentane and 274 K in octane) are close to the inversion temperatures derived from
the Eyring plots of the experimental diastereoselectivity (see figure1). On the other hand there is no
reason to believe that only solvation effects directly connected to chirality are the only enthalpic effects
that can contribute to the reaction outcome and this is probably the origin of the differences between the
slopes of the <G0S> and selectivity curves. On the whole our findings definitely supports the hypothesis
14
that the inversion temperature for the stereoselective reaction studied is largely solvent-driven and that
Figure 9: The logarithm of the average molecular chiral index <G0S> for (R)-2-phenyl-propionaldehyde dissolved in pentane
(left) and octane (right) as obtained from the MD simulations (circles) together with the regression lines and the chiral break
temperatures TCI.
CONCLUSIONS
The molecular level description of solvation processes and of their effects on the details of chemical
reactions is an important topic that still has a large margin for development, both from the point of view
of understanding and rationalization and, even more, from that of predicting temperature dependent
effects like inversion temperatures 7,8. Here we have approached the specific case of stereoselectivity in
12
a nucleophilic addition, with the aim of verifying the hypothesis that the observed solvent and
temperature effects on facial selectivity are closely related to the nature of solvation in the local
solvents: pentane and octane at a number of temperatures and found (i) that they show an inversion
temperature and (ii) that these temperatures are quite different (204 and 288K). We have then performed
15
extensive molecular dynamics computer simulations for the two aldehyde-solvent systems and
measured the facial solvation of the carbonyl bond. We have found that the close presence of a chiral
center determines different average solvent densities on the two faces of the π-bond and that the density
depends on the solvent used; from this point of view, pentane and octane show remarkable differences,
which are likely to affect the diastereoselectivity of a nucleophilic reaction if we think at the solvent
density as a measure of accessibility of a face. The higher diastereoselectivity reported in pentane can
be rationalized as an higher accessibility of the face which leads to the anti product. This concept is not
sufficient in itself to explain the presence of an inversion temperature, and the quantification from our
simulations of the amount of solvent in the neighborhood of a side of the carbonylic bond has proven to
be not sufficiently sensitive for the purpose. We have then focused on a solute physical property, the
30,31
conformationally averaged molecular chiral index <G0S>, that we have determined from the
simulations. We have found that ln<G0S> exhibits a nonlinear temperature dependence in both solvents
with chirality break temperatures TCI which are in a good agreement with the experimental selectivity
inversion temperatures (pentane: TCI=223 K, Tinv=204 K; octane TCI=274 K, Tinv=288 K). The MD
simulations thus show the existence of an inversion temperature which can be ascribed to the interaction
of the aldehyde with the solvent and it is, in this respect, independent on the nature of the reactant. The
chiral index <G0S> hence results in a sensitive probe for temperature and solvent effects.
Although the detailed nature of the specific solvent-solute interactions responsible for the inversion of
selectivity still has to be investigated in general terms, we believe that the approach developed here,
with full inclusion of the solvent, provides an important opening and warrants a systematic study on a
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We gratefully acknowledge financial support from MIUR through FIRB project “Solvent and
temperature effect on stereoselective processes in organic synthesis”, from University of Bologna and
from INSTM.
16
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
1. Experimental part.
2. Table A. Percentage concentration of anti and syn diastereoisomers in the nBuLi addition to
aldehyde 1 in n-pentane and n-octane.
3. Table B. Fit parameters of the DFT torsional potential.
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[22] Maris, A.; Caminati, W. Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 2003, 5, 2795.
[23] Procacci, P.; Paci, E.; Darden, T.; Marchi, M. J. Comput. Chem. 1997, 18, 1848.
[25] see, e.g., Dorfmüller,Th.; Pecora, R. Rotational dynamics of small and macromolecules;
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[26] Ruch, E.; Runge, W.; Kresze, G. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl 1973, 20, 12
[27] Ruch, E., Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. Engl 1977, 65, 16
[28] Buda, A.; Mislow, K., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1992, 114, 6006.
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[29] Petitjean, M., Entropy 2003, 5, 271.
[30] Solymosi, M.; Low, R.J.; Grayson, M.; Neal, M. P. J. Chem. Phys. 2002, 116, 9875.
[31] Neal, M. P.; Solymosi, M.; Wilson, M. R.; Earl, D. J. J. Chem. Phys. 2003, 119, 3567.
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