Antarafacial and suprafacial
In organic chemistry, antarafacial and suprafacial are two topological concepts describing the relationship between two simultaneous chemical bond-making and/or -breaking processes in or around a reaction center. The reaction center can be a p- or spn-orbital, a conjugated system or even a sigma bond.
- The relationship is antarafacial when opposite faces of the π system or isolated orbital are involved in the process. For a σ bond, it corresponds to involvement of one "interior" lobe and one "exterior" lobe of the bond.
- The relationship is suprafacial when the same face of the π system or isolated orbital are involved in the process. For a σ bond, it corresponds to involvement of two "interior" lobes or two "exterior" lobes of the bond.
An example is the -hydride shift, in which the interacting frontier orbitals are the allyl free radical and the hydrogen 1s orbitals. The suprafacial shift is symmetry-forbidden because orbitals with opposite algebraic signs overlap. The symmetry-allowed antarafacial shift would require a strained transition state and is also unlikely. In contrast a symmetry allowed and suprafacial -hydride shift is a common event.