Evidence of Substituent-Induced Electronic Interplay. Effect of
the Remote Aromatic Ring Substituent of Phenyl Benzoates on the
Sensitivity of the Carbonyl Unit to Electronic Effects of Phenyl or
Benzoyl Ring Substituents
posted on 2004-05-28, 00:00authored byHelmi Neuvonen, Kari Neuvonen, Paavo Pasanen
Carbonyl carbon 13C NMR chemical shifts δC(CO) measured in this work for a wide set of
substituted phenyl benzoates p-Y-C6H4CO2C6H4-p-X (X = NO2, CN, Cl, Br, H, Me, or MeO; Y =
NO2, Cl, H, Me, MeO, or NMe2 ) have been used as a tool to study substituent effects on the carbonyl
unit. The goal of the work was to study the cross-interaction between X and Y in that respect.
Both the phenyl substituents X and the benzoyl substituents Y have a reverse effect on δC(CO).
Electron-withdrawing substituents cause shielding while electron-donating ones have an opposite
influence, with both inductive and resonance effects being significant. The presence of cross-interaction between X and Y could be clearly verified. Electronic effects of the remote aromatic
ring substituents systematically modify the sensitivity of the CO group to the electronic effects
of the phenyl or benzoyl ring substituents. Electron-withdrawing substituents in one ring decrease
the sensitivity of δC(CO) to the substitution of another ring, while electron-donating substituents
inversely affect the sensitivity. It is suggested that the results can be explained by substituent-sensitive balance of the contributions of different resonance structures (electron delocalization,
Scheme ).