Fluorine Gauche Effect Explained by Electrostatic
Polarization Instead of Hyperconjugation: An Interacting Quantum Atoms
(IQA) and Relative Energy Gradient (REG) Study
posted on 2018-01-30, 20:52authored byJoseph
C. R. Thacker, Paul L. A. Popelier
We
present an interacting quantum atoms (IQA) study of the gauche
effect by comparing 1,2-difluoroethane, 1,2-dichloroethane,
and three conformers of 1,2,3,4,5,6-hexafluorocyclohexane. In the
1,2-difluoroethane, the gauche effect is observed
in that the gauche conformation is more stable than
the anti, whereas in 1,2-dichloroethane the opposite
is true. The analysis performed here is exhaustive and unbiased thanks
to using the recently introduced relative energy gradient (REG) method
[Thacker, J. C. R.; Popelier, P. L. A. Theor.
Chem. Acc. 2017, 136, 86], as implemented in the in-house program ANANKE.
We challenge the common explanation that hyperconjugation is responsible
for the gauche stability in 1,2-difluoroethane and
instead present electrostatics as the cause of gauche stability. Our explanation of the gauche effect
is also is seen in other molecules displaying local gauche conformations, such as the recently synthesized “all-cis” hexafluorocyclohexane and its conformers
where all the fluorine atoms are in the equatorial positions. Using
our extension of the traditional IQA methodology that allows for the
partitioning of electrostatic terms into polarization and charge transfer,
we propose that the cause of gauche stability is
1,3 C···F electrostatic polarization interactions. In other words, if a number of fluorine atoms are
aligned, then the stability due to polarization of nearby carbon atoms
is increased.