Peter J. Canfield*, Jeffrey R. Reimers* and Maxwell J. Crossley*,
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The term “polytopal rearrangement” describes any shape changing process operating on a coordination “polyhedron”─the solid figure defined by the positions of the ligand atoms directly attached to the central atom of a coordination entity. Developed in the latter third of the last century, the polytopal rearrangement model of stereoisomerization is a general mathematical approach for analyzing and accommodating the complexity of such processes for any coordination number. The motivation for the model was principally to deal with the complexity, such as Berry pseudorotation in pentavalent phosphorus species, arising from rearrangements in inorganic coordination complexes of higher coordination numbers. The model is also applicable to lower coordination centers, for example, thermal “inversion” at nitrogen in NH3 and amines. We present the history of the model focusing on its essential features, and review some of the more subtle aspects addressed in recent literature. We then introduce a more detailed and rigorous modern approach for describing such processes using an assembly of existing concepts, with the addition of formally described terminology and representations. In our outlook, we contend that the rigorous and exhaustive application of the principles of the polytopal rearrangement model, when combined with torsional isomerism, will provide a basis for a mathematically complete, general, and systematic classification for all stereoisomerism and stereoisomerization. This is essential for comprehensively mapping chemical structure and reaction spaces.
期刊介绍:
ACS Organic & Inorganic Au is an open access journal that publishes original experimental and theoretical/computational studies on organic organometallic inorganic crystal growth and engineering and organic process chemistry. Short letters comprehensive articles reviews and perspectives are welcome on topics that include:Organic chemistry Organometallic chemistry Inorganic Chemistry and Organic Process Chemistry.