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Journal Article

Stereochemical analysis of menthol and menthylamine isomers using calculated and experimental optical rotation data.

MPS-Authors
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Reinscheid,  U. M.
Department of NMR Based Structural Biology, MPI for biophysical chemistry, Max Planck Society;

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Reinscheid,  F.
Department of NMR Based Structural Biology, MPI for biophysical chemistry, Max Planck Society;

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2231208.pdf
(Publisher version), 811KB

Supplementary Material (public)

2231208_Suppl.doc
(Supplementary material), 484KB

2231208_Corrigendum.pdf
(Supplementary material), 171KB

Citation

Reinscheid, U. M., & Reinscheid, F. (2016). Stereochemical analysis of menthol and menthylamine isomers using calculated and experimental optical rotation data. Journal of Molecular Structure, 1103, 166-176. doi:10.1016/j.molstruc.2015.09.013.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0029-1EDF-7
Abstract
The complete series of menthol isomers and their corresponding amino derivatives (base and protonated/HCl forms), were investigated using experimental and theoretical data. Our study focused on the conformational and configurational analysis, and revealed that experimental data should be used in combination with calculated data. Furthermore, even in the case of the highly studied member, menthol, discrepancies were found among previously published literature values. We show that the correct determination of the population mix is a must for the correct prediction of the absolute configuration (AC) of neoisomenthol. The neoiso forms are of special interest since a number of structural inconsistences can be found in the literature. We present a stringent proof of the AC of neoisomenthol based on literature information. To the best of our knowledge, the AC of neoisomenthylamine is for the first time shown using experimental and calculated optical rotation data. A correction of a series of publications containing an important error in the assignment of (+)-menthylamine (correct: (+)-neomenthylamine) is presented. With 26 data pairs (experimental versus calculated) of optical rotation values a regression is performed. The AC of all 12 compounds, even the most difficult neoiso forms, could be predicted correctly using experimental low-temperature NMR data. Furthermore, if only experimental data with an optical rotation outside the range of -10 < [alpha] > +10 are used, all 12 compounds would have been correctly assigned without low-temperature NMR data as restraints.