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Topic: Exceptions to Hammond's Postulate?  (Read 2798 times)

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Offline james_a

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Exceptions to Hammond's Postulate?
« on: October 10, 2011, 01:09:15 PM »
A student asked me last week when to expect exceptions to Hammond's postulate. Stumped me. I'm not a physical organic chemist so I thought I'd throw this question out there. Any ideas?

Offline opsomath

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Re: Exceptions to Hammond's Postulate?
« Reply #1 on: October 12, 2011, 02:30:56 PM »
Dang, that's a good question...of course, the "student" answer is "You don't."

All I can think of is a very diabatic system, like the thermal homolysis of a weak bond where the product barrierlessly rearranges into something else. The "something else" would be very different from the TS, even if it were high-energy, and thus violate HP. Maybe something like a thermal nitrene formation from azide, which rearranges into a seven-membered aza ring? That might have a local minimum on the nitrene, though...

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