The conformational landscape and ring-puckering properties of ε-caprolactone have been analyzed by using microwave spectroscopy and quantum chemical calculations. Two conformers were detected in a supersonic jet expansion, the most stable form being a chair containing the ester group in its rectangular flap. This conformation benefits from reduced CH2 bond eclipsing and angle strain, while π-electron delocalization in the ester group is increased. The derived effective structure of the chair form satisfactorily agrees with the calculated near-equilibrium structure. A twist-boat conformer was also identified (9.4 kJ mol(-1) higher in energy at CCSD(T)/aug-cc-pVTZ level), and was located in the boat-twist-boat pseudorotation cycle of the seven-membered ring. Three other low-energy conformers were investigated and characterized in terms of the four puckering coordinates of the seven-membered ring. Potential interconversions in the four-dimensional conformation space are also discussed.
The pure rotational spectra of the bicyclic aromatic nitrogen heterocycle molecules, quinazoline, quinoxaline, and phthalazine, have been recorded and assigned in the region 13-87 GHz. An analysis, guided by ab initio molecular orbital predictions, of frequency-scanned Stark modulated, jet-cooled millimeter wave absorption spectra (48-87 GHz) yielded a preliminary set of rotational and centrifugal distortion constants. Subsequent spectral analysis at higher resolution was carried out with Fourier transform microwave (FT-MW) spectroscopy (13-18 GHz) of a supersonic rotationally cold molecular beam. The high spectral resolution of the FT-MW instrument provided an improved set of rotational and centrifugal distortion constants together with nitrogen quadrupole coupling constants for all three species. Density functional theory calculations at the B3LYP∕6-311+G∗∗ level of theory closely predict rotational constants and are useful in predicting quadrupole coupling constants and dipole moments for such species.
The conformational and structural properties of the bicyclic quinolizidine alkaloid (-)-lupinine have been investigated in a supersonic jet expansion using microwave spectroscopy. The rotational spectrum is consistent with a single dominant trans conformation within a double-chair skeleton, which is stabilized by more than 10.4 kJ mol(-1) with respect to other conformations. In the isolated conditions of the jet, the hydroxy methyl side chain of the molecule locks in to form an intramolecular O-H···N hydrogen bond to the electron lone pair at the nitrogen atom. Accurate rotational constants, centrifugal distortion corrections, and (14)N nuclear quadrupole coupling parameters are reported and compared to ab initio (MP2) and DFT (M06-2X) calculations. The stability of lupinine is further compared computationally with epilupinine and decaline in order to gauge the influence of intramolecular hydrogen bonding, absent in these molecules.
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