What is the difference between nonaromatic heterocycles and aromatic heterocycles?

1 Answer
Mar 4, 2016

Heterocycles are cyclic compounds with more than one type of atom in the ring (hetero = different).

Obviously the difference between nonaromatic and aromatic heterocycles is that aromatic heterocycles are... well... aromatic. So now we should see what that really means.

Let's take a look at an example.

PYRIDINE IS AROMATIC

Pyridine is an aromatic heterocycle.

Organic Chemistry, Bruice

  • It has #4n+2# delocalized #p# electrons in the ring (the lone pair does NOT count; it is in an #sp^2# orbital parallel to the ring, perpendicular to each of the 6 #2p_z# orbitals from each atom around the ring, and hence external to the ring), where #n = 1#.
  • It is fully conjugated throughout the ring.
  • It is cyclic and planar.

Hence, it meets all requirements for aromaticity.

PYRIDINE LOOK-ALIKE? ...NOT AROMATIC!

I thought this example of a photopyridone looked cool. It kinda looks like pyridine, but it is a nonaromatic heterocycle. This is a tricky one, but let's see.

  • The #sp^2# orbital on nitrogen is bonding with the hydrogen, so it just so happens that the lone pair is in a #2p_z# orbital perpendicular to the ring, and hence it is participating in the ring. Therefore, there are #4n+2# #p# electrons in the ring, where #n = 1#. Do not count the carbonyl #p# electrons outside of the ring. They don't qualify in assigning aromaticity.

  • It is cyclic, and it is actually fairly planar because of how the carbonyl and other double bonds lock the bonds in place.

  • Here is why it is not aromatic. Really, at the carbon nearest the carbonyl carbon from the counterclockwise direction, we have drawn a resonance structure in which the #pi# electrons have gone outside of the ring. So by a technicality, it fails to be aromatic since it is not fully conjugated all the way around the ring.