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4.3: Converting Between Chair Conformations

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    319864
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    How do you convert between one chair and another so that you can decide which chair will be more stable, or which side of the equilibrium will be favored? Essentially, you take the apex at C1 and C4 and bring them “down” and “up,” respectively. When this occurs, what was axial now becomes equatorial and what was equatorial becomes axial. In all cases, a substituent that was marked by a wedge or a dash in a 2-D drawing will remain that way, but in the chair conformation, the wedge might means axial “up” instead of equatorial “up” depending on whether it is a right- or left-handed chair. In both cases, a “bird’s eye view” will reinforce that the stereochemical orientation of a particular group has not changed.

    Screen Shot 2021-05-20 at 9.21.27 AM.png

    As an example, what is the most stable chair conformation for menthol?

    1. First, draw one chair conformation (this can be done arbitrarily)
    2. Number both the 2-D drawing AND the chair conformation clockwise or counterclockwise (stay consistent).
    3. Place substituents on the ring in either axial or equatorial positions depending on how they are represented with dashes or wedges in the 2-D structure.
    4. Perform the ring flip by moving C1 and C4 “down” and “up” respectively. Renumber the ring clockwise (or counterclockwise, staying consistent).
    5. Decide which conformation is lower in energy based on A-values.

    Screen Shot 2021-05-20 at 9.21.37 AM.png

    Since all substituents are equatorial in the left-handed chair, it is more stable.

     

    Consider isomenthol, a diastereomer of menthol. What is the most stable conformation of isomenthol?

    Screen Shot 2021-05-20 at 9.21.49 AM.png

    Consider 1,4-di-tert-butylcyclohexane. What is the most stable conformation of this molecule? You might notice that both conformations have one tBu group axial and the other equatorial. So, which one is favored? Neither! Here, the most stable conformation is no longer a chair, but rather the boat conformation. Since you can get both tBu substituents in an equatorial position, the boat conformation is more stable.

    Screen Shot 2021-05-20 at 9.23.49 AM.png


    4.3: Converting Between Chair Conformations is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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