Sign In

The molecular ions of cycloalkenes undergo fragmentation via a retro-Diels–Alder reaction.

The reaction proceeds via the cleavage of two carbon-carbon bonds in the cycloalkene to yield ethene. The remaining part of the cycloalkene structure is a dienyl radical cation with a molecular weight of 28 u lower than the molecular ion. This fragmentation pathway is similar to the fragmentation of cycloalkanes releasing ethene, differing only in the resultant radical cation. An alkyl species forms from the cycloalkane, whereas a dienyl species originates from the cycloalkene.

Retro-Diels–Alder reactions of cycloalkenes are also similar to the McLafferty-rearrangement-type fragmentation observed in acyclic alkenes with hydrogen on the γ carbon. In both cases, cleavage occurs at two positions, yielding an ethene molecule and an alkenyl species. In acyclic alkenes, the cleavage occurs at one carbon-carbon bond and a carbon-hydrogen bond, along with rearranging hydrogen from one carbon to another. In cyclic alkenes, cleavage occurs at two carbon–carbon bonds without any atomic rearrangement. Figure 1 depicts the fragmentation of cyclohexene via a retro-Diels–Alder reaction.

Figure1

Figure 1: Fragmentation of cyclohexene via a retro-Diels–Alder reaction.

In addition to the retro-Diels–Alder reaction, branched cycloalkenes exhibit fragmentation via cleavage of the side chain to form a cycloalkene cation. For example, the fragmentation of 1-methyl-1-cyclohexene via a retro-Diels–Alder reaction and side-chain cleavage are shown in Figure 2.

Figure2

Figure 2: Fragmentation of 1-methyl-1-cyclohexene via (top) a retro-Diels–Alder reaction; (bottom) side-chain cleavage.

The corresponding signals of the isoprenyl radical cation and the cyclohexenyl cation are evident in the mass spectrum of 1-methyl-1-cyclohexene shown in Figure 3.

Figure3

Figure 3: Mass spectrum of 1-methyl-1-cyclohexene.

From Chapter 15:

article

Now Playing

15.5 : Mass Spectrometry: Cycloalkene Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

909 Views

article

15.1 : Mass Spectrometry: Long-Chain Alkane Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

1.4K Views

article

15.2 : Mass Spectrometry: Branched Alkane Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

775 Views

article

15.3 : Mass Spectrometry: Cycloalkane Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

1.0K Views

article

15.4 : Mass Spectrometry: Alkene Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

2.2K Views

article

15.6 : Mass Spectrometry: Alkyne Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

1.3K Views

article

15.7 : Mass Spectrometry: Alcohol Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

3.0K Views

article

15.8 : Mass Spectrometry: Aromatic Compound Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

1.4K Views

article

15.9 : Mass Spectrometry: Amine Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

1.4K Views

article

15.10 : Mass Spectrometry: Alkyl Halide Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

916 Views

article

15.10 : Mass Spectrometry: Alkyl Halide Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

916 Views

article

15.11 : Mass Spectrometry: Aldehyde and Ketone Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

2.7K Views

article

15.12 : Mass Spectrometry: Carboxylic Acid, Ester, and Amide Fragmentation

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

892 Views

article

15.13 : Chemical Ionization (CI) Mass Spectrometry

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

626 Views

article

15.14 : Electrospray Ionization (ESI) Mass Spectrometry

Mass Spectrometry Fragmentation Methods

600 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved