Stereomutation of pentavalent compounds: validating the Berry pseudorotation, redressing Ugi's turnstile rotation, and revealing the two- and three-arm turnstiles

J Am Chem Soc. 2010 Dec 29;132(51):18127-40. doi: 10.1021/ja105306s. Epub 2010 Nov 17.

Abstract

A general reaction mechanism describes the qualitative change in chemical topology along the reaction pathway. On the basis of this principle, we present a method to characterize intramolecular substituent permutation in pentavalent compounds. A full description of the geometry around five-coordinate atoms using internal coordinates enables the analysis of the structural changes along the stereomutational intrinsic reaction coordinate. The fluxional behavior of experimentally known pentavalent phosphoranes, silicates, and transition-metal complexes has been investigated by density functional theory calculations, and three principal mechanisms have been identified: Berry pseudorotation, threefold cyclic permutation, and half-twist axial-equatorial interchange. The frequently cited turnstile rotation is shown to be equivalent to the Berry pseudorotation. In combination with graph theory, this approach provides a means to systematically investigate the stereomutation of pentavalent molecules and potentially identify hitherto-unknown mechanisms.