Hello you all!
I'm going nuts about the heat of formation of spiroheptanes and spirohexanes. From the data I have, the spirohexane strain energy would be less than the sum of a cyclopropane and a cyclobutane, which I didn't expect.
AM1 confirmed that:
- Geminal methyls at cyclobutane and cyclopropane put themselves wider apart than on neopentane;
- Closing a second ring takes more energy than the first one.
This might be compatible with a smaller strain energy if the C-C bonds are much stronger between a ring carbon and an external one.
Your opinion please?
An other option is that I got conned by the heat of vaporization. I take only liquids everywhere, but for cyclobutane and cyclopropane at 298K the meaning isn't trivial.
Presently, I stick to experimental data for spirohexanes, hoping they are accurate even if I don't grasp the values. But I lack data for spiroheptanes, and can even less imagine values if I didn't understand what happens. I don't even have gem-dimethylcyclobutane.
Would you have more data about spiroheptanes please? Without or with methylidenes and other groups, I can make the corrections if needed. But in a known state (liq, gas, T). For instance NIST has some, inaccessible to me.
Thank you!