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The professor wants to know which is the thermodynamic product and which is the kinetic product.

He says there are only two products - the two on the right that result from the resonance-stabilized complex. I can see a third product - the product on the far left with the question mark over an arrow.

The argument for the far right product being the kinetic product is that it is a tertiary carbocation and therefore the energy barrier to formation is probably lower than the energy barrier to formation of the secondary carbocation.

Alright, sure. However, could one also argue that the far left product is the kinetic product? It is after all the result of a tertiary carbocation. And it is the result of a "pure" tertiary carbocation - not a tertiary carbocation "diluted" by resonance; the far right product results from a resonance-stabilized complex that has both secondary and tertiary carbocation character. This was something I thought of at first. But then I realized I was probably taking resonance contributors too literally and that the resonance-stabilized complex would probably be more favored intermediate because the positive charge is "delocalized".

So what's your take?

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    $\begingroup$ Your last line is pretty much it. The simple way of looking at it is that delocalisation always leads to stabilisation and therefore, a tertiary allylic carbocation is more stable than a tertiary non-allylic carbocation. If delocalisation was unstable, the molecule would not do it. It is a bit counter-intuitive that resonance mixes in some character of a higher-energy state and it leads to stabilisation, but that's what it is. $\endgroup$ Jan 22, 2016 at 10:31
  • $\begingroup$ @orthrocresol can you expand on your comment? I'm sure it'd make a great answer! $\endgroup$
    – Dissenter
    Jan 23, 2016 at 2:16
  • $\begingroup$ Related chemistry.stackexchange.com/questions/59964 $\endgroup$ Oct 12, 2016 at 11:14

2 Answers 2

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Background

First off, let's discuss what we mean by "kinetic" and "thermodynamic" products. The kinetic product is the first formed product, the one that forms the fastest, the one with the largest rate constant. The rate constant, k, can be described using the Arrhenius equation $$\mathrm{k=Ae^{\frac{-Ea}{RT}}}$$ where A is the pre-exponential factor, a measure of the probability of a successful collision. Ea is the activation energy, the energy required to surmount the barrier to reaction, R is the gas constant and T is the temperature in Kelvin.

Usually, in a series of related compounds like we have here, the A factor (which is a very large number to begin with, so would need to change by a large amount to alter the course of a reaction) is assumed to remain relatively unchanged. Consequently the activation energy is viewed as the controlling factor in terms of which reaction pathway is favored.

The thermodynamic product is the product with the lowest energy of formation, the most stable product.

In a reaction where several products can be formed the thermodynamic product could be the same as the kinetic product, or it could be different.

Two examples to further clarify kinetic and thermodynamic products can be found in this earlier answer describing the Diels-Alder reaction between cyclopentadiene and maleic anhydride. The endo isomer is formed first - it is the kinetic product, but if the reaction is run under conditions permitting equilibration, then ultimately the more stable exo product will be predominate. Another example can be found in the sulfonation of naphthalene where naphthalene-1-sulfonic acid is formed initially (the kinetic product), but upon heating will equilibrate and rearrange to the more stable 2-isomer.

A key point here is that in order for the kinetic product to rearrange to the thermodynamic product, the reaction must be reversible under the reaction conditions.

Back to your question

could one also argue that the far left product is the kinetic product?

Technically, according to your diagram, the answer is "no". There are no equilibrium arrows in your reaction diagram, therefore if the far left product were the kinetic product it would be observed.

But maybe you inadvertently left out the equilibrium arrows, what would the answer be if you included them? All 3 possible products are rather analogous, so for starters we would expect similar A factors in the 3 pathways and look to differences in the activation energies to decide which is the preferred pathway (kinetic product). Your product on the left requires a tertiary carbocation as its intermediate, the other two products require a resonance-stabilized allylic carbocation which is further stabilized by a methyl substituent. The latter carbocation is lower in energy (resonance stabilization plus inductive and hyperconjugative stabilization by the methyl group) and so the kinetic product will derive from it.

Of the two allyl resonance structures you've drawn, the one on the right will carry a bit more importance in terms of describing the actual allyl carbocation due to the methyl stabilization described above. Hence I would expect the kinetic product to involve attack at the methylated allyl carbon leading to your far right product being the kinetic product.

Attack at the other allyl terminus produces a product with a methyl group on the double bond. We know from heats of formation that alkylation of a double bond stabilizes the system (because electrons are moving from higher [$\ce{sp^3}$] to lower [$\ce{sp^2}$] energy). Hence, your middle product is a possible thermodynamic product. Your molecule on the far-left also contains a tri-substituted double bond, it may also appear as a thermodynamic product.

Whether or not equilibration between the kinetic and thermodynamic products occurs depends on the reaction conditions. Assuming equilibration is possible, then short reaction times at low temperatures will favor formation of the kinetic product, while higher temperatures and longer reaction times will facilitate transformation of the kinetic product into the thermodynamic product.

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  • $\begingroup$ are you saying that kinetic products are in equilibrium with something? $\endgroup$
    – Dissenter
    Jan 26, 2016 at 4:56
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    $\begingroup$ What I am saying is...if, in any reaction, the kinetic product is transformed into the thermodynamic product, then the kinetic product must be in equilibrium with the intermediate that partitions into the thermodynamic and kinetic products. The pathway to the thermodynamic product will have a higher activation energy, but for every billion or so kinetic product molecules that return to this intermediate, a few will have enough energy to follow the reaction coordinate leading to the thermodynamic product. The thermodynamic product, being lower in energy, is less likely to return to $\endgroup$
    – ron
    Jan 26, 2016 at 16:11
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    $\begingroup$ this intermediate. Hence, given time and energy, the thermodynamic product will accumulate at the expense of the kinetic product. $\endgroup$
    – ron
    Jan 26, 2016 at 16:13
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The product on the far left cannot form in any reasonable amounts. Consider the HOMO of s-cis-butadiene (which is a close enough model system to your dimethylcyclohexadiene): Those contributions that extend into space furthest are those on the terminal carbons.

MOs of butadiene
(Image credit: ChemTube3D.com by Nick Greeves. Ignore the right half of the image, it is not relevant to this part of the question.)

Therefore, it is most likely for an electrophile to attack one of these two carbons. Then also, the attack on the terminal end will give an allylic cation while attacking the middle carbon will result in an unstabilised (albeit tertiary) cation — an allylic cation is much more stabilised and therefore the other cation is unlikely to form at all, even if we don’t consider the lesser contributions of the central carbons to the HOMO.

The next step is to identify a thermodynamic product. This is clearly the one with the higher-substituted double bond; your middle product. Thankfully, there is little discussion as to what is a thermodynamic product.

Determining a kinetic product is not easy at all. There are numerous factors to consider:

  • ease of attack
  • stability of the intermediate
  • favourable orbital overlap (this is probably most important)

The thing about our orbitals here is that we only have one allylic cation where both ends of the allylic system share approximately $+\frac{1}{2}$ charge and being very similar. Thus, we don’t truly know whether it is the slightly larger contribution of the tertiary carbon to the allylic system’s LUMO that is more important or whether it is the more accessable (for a large atom such as bromide) secondary carbon with less steric hindrance. I for my part would not allow myself to judge these two effects and would rely on experimental evidence for one or the other. However, I am inclined to believe that the kinetic product is that with less steric stress (that the steric argument outweighs the LUMO argument) and that thus kinetic and thermodynamic products are identical.

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    $\begingroup$ For the image you linked, it is absolutely necessary to know, that in the right column, the metal ion is not in the same plane as the butadiene; it is $\nu^4$ coordinated. I know that this is not about the point you are making, but it got me thinking and it might get some others thinking, too. $\endgroup$ Jan 25, 2016 at 4:02
  • $\begingroup$ Didn’t you mean $\unicode[Times]{x3b7}^4$ coordinated? $\endgroup$
    – Jan
    Jan 25, 2016 at 13:10
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    $\begingroup$ Yes, I did... I was typing that on the phone and some things just slip away ;) $\endgroup$ Jan 25, 2016 at 13:14

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