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In organic chemistry, a xylylene (sometimes quinone-dimethide) is any of the constitutional isomers having the formula C6H4(CH2)2. These compounds are related to the corresponding quinones and quinone methides by replacement of the oxygen atoms by CH2 groups. ortho- and para-xylylene are best known, although neither is stable in solid or liquid form. The meta form is a diradical. Certain substituted derivatives of xylylenes are however highly stable, such as tetracyanoquinodimethane and the xylylene dichlorides.
p-Xylylene forms upon pyrolysis of p- xylene or, more readily, the α-substituted derivatives. p-Xylylene dimerizes with moderate efficiency to give p- cyclophane: [1]
Further heating of the p-cyclophane gives poly(para-xylylene).
o-Xylylenes (o-quinodimethanes) are often generated in situ, [2] e.g., by the pyrolysis of the corresponding sulfone. [3] Another method involves 1,4-elimination of ortho benzylic silanes. [4] or stannanes, [5] [6] [7]
α,α'-ortho Xylene dibromides have been well developed for generating o-xylyenes. [8] For example, reaction of tetrabromo-o-xylene (C6H4(CHBr2)2) with sodium iodide affords α,α'-dibromo-o-xylylene, which can be trapped to give naphthylene derivatives. In the absence of trapping agents, the xylylene relaxes to α,α'-dibromobenzocyclobutane: [9]
Cycloadditions of these o-xylylenes provides a pathway to acenes. [10]
The diene unit formed by the two exocyclic alkene units of the ortho isomer can serve as a ligand in coordination complexes. For example, reaction of α,α'-dibromo-o-xylene with iron carbonyls affords low yields of the xylylene complex Fe(CO)3[η4-C6H4(CH2)2]. This product is structurally analogous to Fe(CO)3[η4- 1,3-butadiene]. [11]
At high temperatures, benzocyclobutenes undergo electrocyclic ring-opening to form o-xylylenes. This and other syntheses of o-xylylenes, and their subsequent dimerization by [4+4] cycloaddition to form cycloctyl structures, were used repeatedly in the synthesis of superphane. [12]
Despite the observed chemistry of para-xylylene (i.e. its rapid polymerization to poly-p-xylylene), which suggests the compound exists as a diradical, physical evidence unanimously concludes that the lowest electronic state of p-xylylene is a closed shell singlet. Additionally, several computational methods confirm this assignment. [13] Conversely, meta-xylylene is a non-Kekulé molecule that has a triplet ground-state. [14]
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In organic chemistry, a xylylene (sometimes quinone-dimethide) is any of the constitutional isomers having the formula C6H4(CH2)2. These compounds are related to the corresponding quinones and quinone methides by replacement of the oxygen atoms by CH2 groups. ortho- and para-xylylene are best known, although neither is stable in solid or liquid form. The meta form is a diradical. Certain substituted derivatives of xylylenes are however highly stable, such as tetracyanoquinodimethane and the xylylene dichlorides.
p-Xylylene forms upon pyrolysis of p- xylene or, more readily, the α-substituted derivatives. p-Xylylene dimerizes with moderate efficiency to give p- cyclophane: [1]
Further heating of the p-cyclophane gives poly(para-xylylene).
o-Xylylenes (o-quinodimethanes) are often generated in situ, [2] e.g., by the pyrolysis of the corresponding sulfone. [3] Another method involves 1,4-elimination of ortho benzylic silanes. [4] or stannanes, [5] [6] [7]
α,α'-ortho Xylene dibromides have been well developed for generating o-xylyenes. [8] For example, reaction of tetrabromo-o-xylene (C6H4(CHBr2)2) with sodium iodide affords α,α'-dibromo-o-xylylene, which can be trapped to give naphthylene derivatives. In the absence of trapping agents, the xylylene relaxes to α,α'-dibromobenzocyclobutane: [9]
Cycloadditions of these o-xylylenes provides a pathway to acenes. [10]
The diene unit formed by the two exocyclic alkene units of the ortho isomer can serve as a ligand in coordination complexes. For example, reaction of α,α'-dibromo-o-xylene with iron carbonyls affords low yields of the xylylene complex Fe(CO)3[η4-C6H4(CH2)2]. This product is structurally analogous to Fe(CO)3[η4- 1,3-butadiene]. [11]
At high temperatures, benzocyclobutenes undergo electrocyclic ring-opening to form o-xylylenes. This and other syntheses of o-xylylenes, and their subsequent dimerization by [4+4] cycloaddition to form cycloctyl structures, were used repeatedly in the synthesis of superphane. [12]
Despite the observed chemistry of para-xylylene (i.e. its rapid polymerization to poly-p-xylylene), which suggests the compound exists as a diradical, physical evidence unanimously concludes that the lowest electronic state of p-xylylene is a closed shell singlet. Additionally, several computational methods confirm this assignment. [13] Conversely, meta-xylylene is a non-Kekulé molecule that has a triplet ground-state. [14]