I'm in general chem and a question about cyclopentadiene appeared as a bonus on one of our exams. We had to explain cyclopentadiene's relatively strong proton donating ability (compared to other hydrocarbons) and draw a lewis structure of the cyclopentadienyl anion.
I think it's because all but one of the carbons in the molecule are sp2 hybridized. The fifth is sp3 hybridized (since it has two C-C bonds and two C-H bonds). By removing a H+, the two unpaired electrons on that carbon are able to participate in delocalized pi-bonding with unhybridized p-orbitals of the other four carbons. Thus, the cyclopentadienyl anion is a more stable aromatic structure than its protonated counterpart, cyclopentadiene.
Is that the correct explanation or am I way off?