This review sets
out to understand the reactivity of diradicals
and how that may differ from monoradicals. In the first part of the
review, we delineate the electronic structure of a diradical with
its two degenerate or nearly degenerate molecular orbitals, occupied
by two electrons. A classification of diradicals based on whether
or not the two SOMOs can be located on different sites of the molecule
is useful in determining the ground state spin. Important is a delocalized
to localized orbital transformation that interchanges “closed-shell”
to “open-shell” descriptions. The resulting duality
is useful in understanding the dual reactivity of singlet diradicals.
In the second part of the review, we examine, with a consistent level
of theory, activation energies of prototypical radical reactions (dimerization,
hydrogen abstraction, and addition to ethylene) for representative
organic diradicals and diradicaloids in their two lowest spin states.
Differences and similarities in reactivity of diradicals vs monoradicals,
based on either a localized or delocalized view, whichever is suitable,
are then discussed. The last part of this review begins with an extensive,
comparative, and critical survey of available measures of diradical
character and ends with an analysis of the consequences of diradical
character for selected diradicaloids.
Radicals can be regarded as electrophilic/nucleophilic, depending on their tendency to attack sites of relatively higher/lower electron density. In this paper, an electrophilicity scale, global as well as local, and a nucleophilicity scale for 35 radicals is reported. The global electrophilicity scale correlates well with the nucleophilicity scale, suggesting that these concepts are inversely related.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.