Cyclohexane and related rings The interconversion of equivalent chair conformers of
cyclohexane (and many other cyclic compounds) is called
ring flipping. Carbon–hydrogen bonds that are axial in one configuration become equatorial in the other, and vice versa. At room temperature the two chair conformations rapidly
equilibrate. The
proton- and carbon-13 NMR spectra of cyclohexane show each only singlets near room temperature. At low temperatures, the singlet in the 1H NMR spectrum decoalesces but the 13C NMR spectrum remains unchanged.
Berry pseudorotation of pentacoordinate compounds A prototypical fluxional molecule is
phosphorus pentafluoride. Its
19F NMR spectrum consists of a 31P-coupled doublet, indicating that the equatorial and axial fluorine centers interchange rapidly on the NMR timescale.
Fluorine-19 NMR spectroscopy, even at temperatures as low as −100 °C, fails to distinguish the axial from the equatorial fluorine environments. The apparent equivalency arises from the low barrier for
pseudorotation via the
Berry mechanism, by which the axial and equatorial fluorine atoms rapidly exchange positions.
Iron pentacarbonyl (Fe(CO)5) follows the pattern set for PF5: only one signal is observed in the 13C NMR spectrum near room temperature) whereas at low temperatures, two signals in a 2:3 ratio can be resolved. In
sulfur tetrafluoride (SF4), a similar pattern is observed even though this compound has only four ligands.
Six-coordinate species While nonrigidity is common for pentacoordinate species, six-coordinate species typically adopt a more rigid
octahedral molecular geometry, featuring close-packed array of six ligating atoms surrounding a central atom. Such compounds do rearrange intramolecularly via the
Ray-Dutt twist and the
Bailar twist, but the barriers for these processes are typically high such that these processes do not lead to line broadening. For some compounds, dynamics occur via dissociation of a ligand, giving a pentacoordinate intermediate, which is subject to the mechanisms discussed above. Yet another mechanism, exhibited by Fe(CO)4(SiMe3)2 and related hydride complexes, is intramolecular scrambling of ligands over the faces of the tetrahedron defined by the four CO ligands.
Dimethylformamide A classic example of a fluxional molecule is
dimethylformamide (DMF). At temperatures near 100 °C, the 500 MHz 1H NMR spectrum of DMF shows only one signal for the methyl groups. Near room temperature, however, separate signals are seen for the non-equivalent methyl groups. The rate of exchange can be calculated at the temperature where the two signals are just merged. This "coalescence temperature" depends on the measuring field. The relevant equation is : k = \frac{\pi \Delta \nu_0}{\sqrt{2}} \sim 2 \Delta \nu_0, where Δν0 is the difference between the frequencies (in Hz) of the exchanging sites. These frequencies are obtained from the limiting low-temperature NMR spectrum. At these lower temperatures, the dynamics continue, of course, but the contribution of the dynamics to line broadening is negligible. For example, if Δν0 = 1ppm @ 500 MHz, : k \sim 2(500) = 1000~\text{s}^{-1} (~0.5 millisecond
half-life).
"Ring whizzing" The compound Fe(η5-C5H5)(η1-C5H5)(CO)2 exhibits the phenomenon of "ring whizzing". At 30 °C, the 1H NMR spectrum shows only two peaks, one typical (δ5.6) of the η5-C5H5 and the other assigned η1-C5H5. The singlet assigned to the η1-C5H5 ligand splits at low temperatures owing to the slow hopping of the Fe center from carbon to carbon in the η1-C5H5 ligand. Two mechanisms have been proposed, with the consensus favoring the 1,2 shift pathway. ==See also==