Linearly
Polymerized Benzene Arrays As Intermediates,
Tracing Pathways to Carbon Nanothreads
Posted on 2015-11-18 - 00:00
How might fully saturated benzene
polymers of composition [(CH)6]n form under high pressure? In
the first approach to answering this question, we examine the stepwise
increase in saturation of a one-dimensional stack of benzene molecules
by enumerating the partially saturated polymer intermediates, subject
to constraints of unit cell size and energy. Defining the number of
four-coordinate carbon atoms per benzene formula unit as the degree
of saturation, a set of isomers for degree-two and degree-four polymers
can be generated by either thinking of the propagation of partially
saturated building blocks or by considering a sequence of cycloadditions.
There is also one 4 + 2 reaction sequence that jumps directly from
a benzene stack to a degree-four polymer. The set of degree-two polymers
provides several useful signposts toward achieving full saturation:
chiral versus achiral building blocks, certain forms of conformational
freedom, and also dead ends to further saturation. These insights
allow us to generate a larger set of degree-four polymers and enumerate
the many pathways that lead from benzene stacks to completely saturated
carbon nanothreads.
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Chen, Bo; Hoffmann, Roald; Ashcroft, N. W.; Badding, John; Xu, Enshi; Crespi, Vincent (2016). Linearly
Polymerized Benzene Arrays As Intermediates,
Tracing Pathways to Carbon Nanothreads. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5b09053