We have demonstrated the features of curve-structured phenalenyl chemistry, for the first time. A phenalenyl-fused corannulene anion has been designed by the annelation of a six-memberd ring across peri-positions of corannulene and generated as a stable species in a degassed solution. The 1H and 13C NMR spectra have shown the highly symmetrical structure and high-field shifts of protons and carbons at the asterisked positions in the chemical structure, indicating the occurrence of large negative charge densities at these positions. These results well agree with the HOMO picture and the electrostatic potential surface, demonstrating the phenalenyl anion-type electronic structure is retained in the curved-surface pi-system. The calculated bowl-inversion barrier of the anion (11.3 kcal/mol) is larger than that of corannulene (9.2 kcal/mol) because of peri-annelation of the corannulene skeleton. The calculations of the barriers of the neutral radical (12.6 kcal/mol), radical dianion (8.1 kcal/mol), and trianion (5.4 kcal/mol) of the phenalenyl-fused corannulene have exhibited a stepwise flattening of the curvature with increase in negative charge. Therefore, we have revealed that the bowl-inversion barrier of the anion is governed by the setoff of the peri-annelation and negative charge effects.
[structure: see text] A bowl-shaped neutral radical with a corannulene system has been designed and synthesized for the first time as a stable solid in air. An unequivocal characterization of the electronic properties of the radical shows that an appreciable amount of spin delocalization extends onto the corannulene unit's curved surface.
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