Olympicene has 18 pi electrons in its ring system; as it is a flat molecule, this makes it an aromatic molecule. The central ring is not an aromatic ring.
Related compounds
A very similar molecule (benzo[c]phenanthrene) which lacks the −CH2− spacer between the two sides of the molecule has been known for many years.[5] This earlier molecule has been studied by X-ray crystallography and due to the steric clash between two hydrogen atoms the molecule is not flat.[6] It is likely that the olympicene is flatter, as no steric clash will exist between the two rings.
A molecule where the −CH2− spacer has been replaced with a ketone (C=O) group (naphthanthrone) has been known for decades.[7] Molecules where the −CH2− spacer has been replaced with oxygen and sulfur atoms have been known for some time.[8] The sulfur compound has a C–S–C angle of 104.53°, which suggests that the sulfur atom is an sp3-hybridized atom rather than being sp2. This suggests that the sulfur atom is not part of the pi system of the molecule.
Professor Sir Martyn Poliakoff of the University of Nottingham has pointed out that the Olympic rings are interlinked, rather than tangent as in olympicene, and that a better likeness could be made using catenanes. A catenane-based olympic molecule was synthesized in 1994 by Fraser Stoddart and given the name olympiadane.[9]
^Cook, J. W. (1931). "CCCL – Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Part VI. 3 : 4-Benzphenanthrene and its quinone". J. Chem. Soc.: 2524–2528. doi:10.1039/jr9310002524.
^Hirshfled, F. L.; Sandler, S.; Schmidt, G. M. J. (1963). "398. The structure of overcrowded aromatic compounds. Part VI. The crystal structure of benzo[c]phenanthrene and of 1,12-dimethylbenzo[c]phenanthrene". J. Chem. Soc.: 2108–2125. doi:10.1039/jr9630002108.
^Donovan, P. M.; Scott, L. T. (2004). "Elaboration of diaryl ketones into naphthalenes fused on two or four sides: A naphthoannulation procedure". J. Am. Chem. Soc.126 (10): 3108–3112. doi:10.1021/ja038254i. PMID15012140.