JCE Software Chemistry Comes Alive!
Diels-Alder Visualization - Part 1 of 3

An introduction to the reaction of butadiene with ethylene to product cyclohexene is presented with examples of how electron bonds may be visualized.

View slide thumbnails.
View Slide Thumbnails
  Next movie.
View Next Movie
 

8.3 MB, 142 seconds

File: MOVIES/DIELS/DIELSA.MOV

Voiceover
This video explores the reaction of butadiene with ethylene to produce cyclohexene.

This is the simplest example of the Diels-Alder reaction, for which the German chemists Otto Diels and Kurt Alder were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1950.

Let us begin with some details of electronic bonding for ethylene.

An ethylene molecule can be represented several ways. Some of the ways use lines to represent the shared electron pairs between atoms. These electronic bonds can also be shown as orbitals which present the shape of the electron cloud forming the bond.

There are two important bonding orbitals in every carbon-carbon double bond, the low energy sigma bond, and a high energy pi bond. Each orbital surface encloses about 90 percent of the electron density for the bond.

Here are the hybrid sp2 orbitals of two separated CH2 fragments. As the two sp2 hybrids come together, a sigma bond is formed. It is called a sigma orbital because it has cylindrical symmetry, or s-like shape about the bond axis. We can similarly picture the formation of the carbon-carbon pi bond. Pi bond formation involves the merging of two p-orbitals, each lobe overlapping with another lobe to form two sausage-like links between the atoms. It is called a pi bond to signify its p-like shape when viewed along the bond axis.

Both the sigma and pi carbon-carbon bonds form as the atoms come together. Note that the strong sigma bond forms first and the weaker pi bond forms at shorter distances. The presence of a sigma bond and a pi bond is also represented by the two stick double bond.


Creator:  
  Andrew Habermas University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
Executive Producers:  
  Frank Weinhold University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
  John W. Moore University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
Support:  
  National Science Foundation, Directorate for Education and Human Resource
  Institute for Chemical Education University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
  Project Seraphim University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
Writers:  
  Erica Bode Jacobsen University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
  J. Monty Wright University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
  Kelly Houston Jetzer University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
  Jerrold J. Jacobsen University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
Animation:  
  Andrew Habermas University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
  J. Monty Wright University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
  Jerrold J. Jacobsen University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
Video production, editing, and voice:  
  Jerrold J. Jacobsen University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706
  Greg Minix University of Wisconsin - Madison, College of Engineering, Madison, WI 53706
  Margaret Biddle University of Wisconsin - Madison, Madison, WI 53706