8'7 Nucleophiles and Nucleophilicity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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8'7 Nucleophiles and Nucleophilicity

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The term solvolysis refers to a nucleophilic. substitution ... formic acid (HCOH) acetic acid (CH3COH) ROCCH3. O. ROCH. O. O. O. Typical solvents in solvolysis ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 8'7 Nucleophiles and Nucleophilicity


1
8.7Nucleophiles and Nucleophilicity
2
Table 8.4 Nucleophilicity
  • Rank Nucleophile Relative rate
  • strong I-, HS-, RS- gt105
  • good Br-, HO-, 104
  • RO-, CN-,
  • fair NH3, Cl-, F-, - 103
  • weak H2O, ROH 1
  • very weak RCO2H 10-2

3
Solvolysis
The term solvolysis refers to a
nucleophilic substitution in which the
nucleophile is the solvent.
4
Solvolysis
substitution by an anionic nucleophile
RX Nu
RNu X
5
Solvolysis
substitution by an anionic nucleophile
RX Nu
RNu X
solvolysis

RNuH X
RX NuH
products of overall reaction
RNu HX
6
Typical solvents in solvolysis
solvent product from RX water
(HOH) ROH methanol (CH3OH) ROCH3 ethanol
(CH3CH2OH) ROCH2CH3 formic acid
(HCOH) acetic acid (CH3COH)
ROCH
ROCCH3
7
Nucleophiles
All nucleophiles, however, are Lewis bases.
8
Nucleophiles
Many of the solvents in which nucleophilic
substitutions are carried out are
themselvesnucleophiles.
..
for example
9
Example Methanolysis
Methanolysis is a nucleophilic substitution in
which methanol acts as both the solvent andthe
nucleophile.

RX
10
Nucleophilicity is a measure of the reactivity of
a nucleophile
  • Table 8.4 compares the relative rates of
    nucleophilic substitution of a variety of
    nucleophiles toward methyl iodide as the
    substrate. The standard of comparison is
    methanol, which is assigned a relativerate of
    1.0.

11
Major factors that control nucleophilicity
  • basicity
  • solvation
  • small negative ions are highly solvated in
    protic solvents
  • large negative ions are less solvated

12
Table 8.4 Nucleophilicity
  • Rank Nucleophile Relative rate
  • good HO, RO 104
  • fair RCO2 103
  • weak H2O, ROH 1

When the attacking atom is the same (oxygenin
this case), nucleophilicity increases with
increasing basicity.
13
Major factors that control nucleophilicity
  • basicity
  • solvation
  • small negative ions are highly solvated in
    protic solvents
  • large negative ions are less solvated

14
Figure 8.4
Solvation of a chloride ion by ion-dipole
attractiveforces with water. The negatively
charged chlorideion interacts with the
positively polarized hydrogensof water.
15
Table 8.4 Nucleophilicity
  • Rank Nucleophile Relative rate
  • strong I- gt105
  • good Br- 104
  • fair Cl-, F- 103

A tight solvent shell around an ion makes itless
reactive. Larger ions are less solvated
thansmaller ones and are more nucleophilic.
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