Nitrogen atom in molecules, has a pyramidal structure that also might be considered as a tetrahedral one if the electron pair is taken in account. Therefore, substitution of heterocyclic nitrogen can be either axial or equatorial.
Only if sp
3Nitrogen atom that belongs to an amide bond, “tends” to have a planar structure rather than a pyramidal one.
The vast majority are planar, including, in my opinion, this one. Amides that do not adopt a planar amide bond are unable to for reasons of extreme strain - such as cases where N is at the bridgehead position (where sp
2 hybridization of the N violates Bredt's rule) or in other cases of extreme steric strain (e.g. amides of 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine). The steric clashing associated with piperidine methylene groups is very similar to methyl groups. If you are suggesting the steric bulk of the piperidine prevents overlap of the N lone pair with the C=O (i.e. sp
2 hybridization) in N-acylpiperidines, but this overlap can be achieved for N,N-dimethyl or -diethyl amides, I don't think you can reasonably explain this with steric arguments. I am not going to take this from you on faith - show me evidence that piperidine amide bonds are not planar.
Consequently, the methyl groups are syn- and anti- to the carbonyl rather than cis- and trans- to a double bond. The latter means that the magnetic anisotropy of the syn-methyl, is due to the neighboring with the carbonyl group and not to the cis-, trans- isomerism that has no anisotropic effect.
So you are saying that the N in N-acetyl and N-formylpiperidine is sp
3? Can you please cite a reference providing peer-reviewed evidence and/or discussion of this phenomenon?
The 13C-NMR spectra of DMF (methyl carbons) and dimethylacetamide (methyl and methylene carbons) have a similar appearance with respect to the magnetic anisotropy but not the ones of n-formylpiperidine and N-acetylpiperidine where 3- and 5- piperidine carbons are magnetically equivalents, while the corresponding 2- and 6- carbons are magnetically inequivalent (because contrary to ethyl groups, the rotation of ring carbons is synchronized).
If you look up the data, you see this is simply not true. All 5 of the piperidine C (including C3 and C5) in both N-formyl and N-acetylpiperidine are inequivalent (just as all 5 piperidine CH
2s are inequivalent in the OP's spectrum):
13C NMR of N-acetylpiperidine: 21.44 (Me). 21.52 ppm (CH2), 25.54 ppm (CH2), 26.46 (CH2), 42.50 (CH2), 47.48 (CH2), 168.77 (CO) - from
J. Phys. Chem. B, 2008, 112, 788513C NMR of N-formylpiperidine: (400 MHz, CDCl3) δ 24.59, 24.99, 26.48, 40.53, 46.75, 160.58 - from
Synth. Commun., 2011, 41, 476 (see supporting info)And also, the amide stretch for N-acetylpiperidine is 1645 cm
-1 - from
Tet. Lett., 2011, 52, 2722 (see supporting info). This is normal amide range and is evidence of strong N-C=O overlap (i.e. sp
2 N).
You have still failed to convince me that: 1. Piperidine amides have an sp
3 N; 2. That the rotation of the amide N-C bond is not restricted by N-C=O overlap; 3. That the inequivalence of the piperidine methylenes in 13C NMR are not due to restricted C-N rotation. I would be interested to see some evidence.
I don't think there is much more I can add to this discussion.