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Diamantane (also called congressane) is an
organic compound In chemistry, organic compounds are generally any chemical compounds that contain carbon-hydrogen or carbon-carbon bonds. Due to carbon's ability to catenate (form chains with other carbon atoms), millions of organic compounds are known. The ...
that is a member of the
diamondoid In chemistry, diamondoids are variants of the carbon cage molecule known as adamantane (C10H16), the smallest unit cage structure of the diamond crystal lattice. Diamondoids also known as nanodiamonds or condensed adamantanes may include one or more ...
s. These are cage hydrocarbons with structures similar to a subunit of the diamond lattice. It is a colorless solid that has been a topic of research since its discovery in oil and separation from deep natural gas condensates. Diamondoids such as diamantane exhibit unusual properties, including low surface energies, high densities, high hydrophobicities, and resistance to oxidation.


Occurrence and history

Diamantane occurs naturally in crude petroleum. It is currently assumed that adamantanes and diamantanes were formed via the catalytic rearrangements of polycyclic naphthenic hydrocarbons. Although present in only trace concentrations in typical oils, due to their great thermodynamic stability, diamondoids such as diamantane are naturally concentrated by catagenesis, becoming important constituents of some natural gas condensates including those from the Norphlet Formation, U.S. Gulf of Mexico, and the Western Canada Basin. : Diamantane was chosen as the Congress Emblem of the 1963 London IUPAC meeting, and was featured as a decoration on the cover of abstracts, program, and publicity material. Congress participants were challenged to synthesize diamantane. The first preparation of this chemical was achieved in 1965 in 1% yield by aluminum halide-catalyzed isomerization of a mixture of norbornene photodimers.
Adamantane Adamantane is an organic compound with a formula C10H16 or, more descriptively, (CH)4(CH2)6. Adamantane molecules can be described as the fusion of three cyclohexane rings. The molecule is both rigid and virtually stress-free. Adamantane is the m ...
was the first, and "Congressane", as diamantane came to be known, was only the second member of an entire family of compounds known as the diamandoids. The synthesis of the third member of the series in 1969 emphasized the need for a more general scheme of semitrivial nomenclature. The compound was renamed "diamantane" and the third member designated "triamantane". The year 1966 also marked the isolation of diamantane from the high-boiling fractions of the crude oil of Hodonin (from which adamantane was discovered) and the achievement of a significant improvement in its yield (to 10%). While this permitted a start to be made in the exploration of the chemistry of diamantane, the hydrocarbon was still difficult to obtain in quantity. Diamantane then became as readily available as adamantane and its chemistry could be studied more easily.


Production

Diamantane can be prepared by Lewis acid catalyzed rearrangements of various pentacyclic tetradecanes. The best yield (84%) can obtained from trans-tetrahydro-Binor-S. A convenient synthetic procedure involves rearrangement of a hydrogenated Binor-S compound, which gives diamantane in ~70% yield. Other more highly strained precursors give diamantane in lower yield (1-47%) owing to disproportionation. The convenient, synthetic route begins with the dimerization of
norbornadiene Norbornadiene is an organic compound and a bicyclic hydrocarbon. Norbornadiene is of interest as a metal-binding ligand, whose complexes are useful for homogeneous catalysis. It has been intensively studied owing to its high reactivity and distin ...
(1) catalyzed by a mixture of cobalt bromide-
triphenylphosphine Triphenylphosphine (IUPAC name: triphenylphosphane) is a common organophosphorus compound with the formula P(C6H5)3 and often abbreviated to P Ph3 or Ph3P. It is widely used in the synthesis of organic and organometallic compounds. PPh3 exists a ...
and
boron trifluoride etherate Boron trifluoride etherate, strictly boron trifluoride diethyl etherate, or boron trifluoride–ether complex, is the chemical compound with the formula BF3O(C2H5)2, often abbreviated BF3OEt2. It is a colorless liquid, although older samples can a ...
. The resulting dimer (2) is hydrogenated to give tetrahydro-binor-S-isomers (3a–3d). As a result of sterical interaction, mainly 3a and 3b are given. The next step is a rearrangement, which occurs in a hot solution of cyclohexane or carbon disulfide with aluminum bromide and forms the main product diamantane (4). Gund, T. M.; Osawa, E.; Van Zandt, W. Jr.; Schleyer, P. v. R.: ''Diamantane. 1. Preparation of Diamantane. Physical and Spectral Properties.'' In: ''
Journal of Organic Chemistry ''The Journal of Organic Chemistry'', colloquially known as ''JOC'', is a peer-reviewed scientific journal for original contributions of fundamental research in all branches of theory and practice in organic and bioorganic chemistry. It is publi ...
'', Band 39, Nr. 20, 1974, S. 2979–2987, doi:10.1021/jo00934a009.
Gund, T. M.; Osawa, E.; Van Zandt, W. Jr.; Schleyer, P. v. R.: ''A Convenient, High-Yield Preparation of Diamantane (Congressane).'' In: ''
Tetrahedron Letters ''Tetrahedron Letters'' is a weekly international journal for rapid publication of full original research papers in the field of organic chemistry. According to the ''Journal Citation Reports'', the journal has a 2020 impact factor of 2.415. Index ...
'', 1970, Band 11 , Nr. 44, S. 3877–3880, doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(01)98613-7.
Gund, T. M.; Thielecke, W.; Schleyer, P. v. R.: ''Diamantane: PENTACYCLO .3.1.14,12.02,7.06,11ETRADECANE utanetetraylnaphthalene,_3,5,1,7-[1,2,3,4decahydro-.html" ;"title=",2,3,4.html" ;"title="utanetetraylnaphthalene, 3,5,1,7-[1,2,3,4">utanetetraylnaphthalene, 3,5,1,7-[1,2,3,4decahydro-">,2,3,4.html" ;"title="utanetetraylnaphthalene, 3,5,1,7-[1,2,3,4">utanetetraylnaphthalene, 3,5,1,7-[1,2,3,4decahydro-'' In: ''Organic Syntheses'', Band 53, 1973, S. 30, doi:10.15227/orgsyn.053.0030. Diamantane can be produced by thermal cracking of long chained ''n''-alkanes. The mechanism for this conversion is thought to be a free-radical addition. Although this method does produce diamantane that has been alkylated (i.e. monosubstituted, disubstituted, and trisubstituted with methyl groups), adamantane derivatives are also produced in greater amounts due to its greater thermodynamic stability. This method also produces a homological series of ''n''-alkanes of up to 35 carbons and coke, as well. The assumption that diamandoid compounds can be synthesized through thermal cracking requires more verification.


Properties

Diamantane is part of the diamandoid-family. The structures of these members are segments of the diamond crystal lattice:

Because of its special structure, diamantane's melting point is high compared to other hydrocarbons. Another result is its high chemical and thermal stability.


Reactions

Diamantane can be nitrated by treatment with
nitronium tetrafluoroborate Nitronium tetrafluoroborate is an inorganic compound with formula NO2BF4. It is a salt of nitronium cation and tetrafluoroborate anion. It is a colorless crystalline solid, which reacts with water to form the corrosive acids HF and HNO3. As suc ...
(in nitrile-free nitromethane) to give a mixture of two isomeric nitrodiamantanes. : Chlorination with
aluminium chloride Aluminium chloride, also known as aluminium trichloride, is an inorganic compound with the formula . It forms hexahydrate with the formula , containing six water molecules of hydration. Both are colourless crystals, but samples are often contam ...
and
acetyl chloride Acetyl chloride (CH3COCl) is an acyl chloride derived from acetic acid. It belongs to the class of organic compounds called acid halides. It is a colorless, corrosive, volatile liquid. Its formula is commonly abbreviated to AcCl. Synthesis On ...
yields equal amounts of 1- and 4-chlorodiamantane, whereas use of chlorosulfonic acid yields mainly the 1-chloro isomer. Hydrolysis of the chlorides yield the corresponding alcohols, which are separable by column chromatography over alumina.


References

{{Reflist Polycyclic nonaromatic hydrocarbons