Suprafacial and Antarafacial

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Suprafacial and antarafacial are terms used in organic chemistry to describe chemical reactions topologically . They describe the topology of the orbitals involved in bond formation , on or around a reaction center. Both σ and π orbitals as well as conjugated π systems can be meant here.

Scheme of a suprafacial and antarafacial pathway

As suprafacial is called when it

  • on the same orbital lobe of a p orbital
  • on the same side of a conjugated π system
  • on the same molecular orbital of a CC or CH σ- bond

a new bond formation or a change in the bond occurs.

Antarafacial describes the opposite case when it is:

  • on both orbital lobes of a p orbital
  • on the opposite side of a conjugated π system
  • on both molecular orbitals of a CC or CH σ-bond

a new bond formation or a change in the bond occurs.

Classical suprafacial reactions include some cycloadditions (such as the Diels-Alder reaction ) and a number of sigmatropic rearrangements . The classic antarafacial reactions mainly include sigmatropic rearrangements.

Whether a reaction proceeds supra- or antarafacial depends on the orbital symmetries. The concept is used, for example, in the Woodward-Hoffmann rules .

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