Title: Chapter 17 Reactions of Aromatic Compounds
1Chapter 17Reactions of Aromatic Compounds
Organic Chemistry, 5th EditionL. G. Wade, Jr.
Jo Blackburn Richland College, Dallas, TX Dallas
County Community College District ã 2003,
Prentice Hall
2Part 1 - Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution
- Electrophile substitutes for a hydrogen on the
benzene ring.
3Mechanism
4Energy Diagramfor aromatic electrophilic addition
5Reactions
- Nitration HNO3 and H2SO4
- Bromination Br2 and FeBr3
- Chlorination Cl2 and AlCl3
- Iodination I2 and HNO3
- Sulfonation SO3 (fuming sulfuric acid)
- Alkylation R-Cl and AlCl3
- Acylation RCOCl and AlCl3
6Nitration of Benzene
- Use sulfuric acid with nitric acid to form the
nitronium ion electrophile.
NO2 then forms a sigma complex with benzene
7Nitration of Toluene
- Toluene reacts 25 times faster than benzene. The
methyl group is an activator. - The product mix contains mostly ortho and para
substituted molecules so methyl group is ortho,
para directing.
8Sigma Complex
- Intermediate is more stable if nitration occurs
at the ortho or para position.
9Energy Diagram
10Activating, O-, P-Directing Substituents
- Alkyl groups stabilize the sigma complex by
induction, donating electron density through the
sigma bond. - Other kinds of groups with a lone pair of
electrons stabilize the sigma complex by
resonance.
11The Amino Group
- Aniline reacts with bromine water (without a
catalyst) to yield the tribromide. Sodium
bicarbonate is added to neutralize the HBr thats
also formed.
12Summary ofActivators
13Ortho Substitutionon Nitrobenzene
14Para Substitution on Nitrobenzene
15Meta Substitutionon Nitrobenzene
16Deactivating Meta-Directing Substituents
- Electrophilic substitution reactions for
nitrobenzene are 100,000 times slower than for
benzene. - The product mix contains mostly the meta isomer,
only small amounts of the ortho and para isomers. - Meta-directors deactivate all positions on the
ring, but the meta position is less deactivated.
17Energy Diagram
18Structure of Meta-Directing Deactivators
- The atom attached to the aromatic ring will have
a partial positive charge. - Electron density is withdrawn inductively along
the sigma bond, so the ring is less electron-rich
than benzene.
19Summary of Deactivators
20More Deactivators
21Summary of Directing Effects
22Multiple Substituents
- The most strongly activating substituent will
determine the position of the next substitution.
May have mixtures.
23Bromination of Benzene
- Requires a stronger electrophile than Br2.
- Use a strong Lewis acid catalyst, FeBr3.
24Chlorination and Iodination
- Chlorination uses AlCl3 as the Lewis acid
catalyst. - Iodination requires an acidic oxidizing agent,
like nitric acid, which oxidizes the iodine to an
iodonium ion.
25Halobenzenes
- Halogens are deactivating toward electrophilic
substitution, but are ortho, para-directing! - Since halogens are very electronegative, they
withdraw electron density from the ring
inductively along the sigma bond. - But halogens have lone pairs of electrons that
can stabilize the sigma complex by resonance.
26Sigma Complexfor Bromobenzene
27Energy Diagram
28Sulfonation
- Sulfur trioxide, SO3, in fuming sulfuric acid is
the electrophile.
29Desulfonation
- All steps are reversible, so sulfonic acid group
can be removed by heating in dilute sulfuric
acid. - This process is used to place deuterium in place
of hydrogen on benzene ring.
30Friedel-Crafts Alkylation
31Formation of Alkyl Benzene
32Limitations ofFriedel-Crafts
- Reaction fails if benzene has a substituent that
is more deactivating than halogen. - Carbocations rearrange. Reaction of benzene with
n-propyl chloride and AlCl3 produces
isopropylbenzene. - The alkylbenzene product is more reactive than
benzene, so polyalkylation occurs.
33Friedel-Crafts Acylation
34Gatterman-KochFormylation
- Formyl chloride is unstable. Use a high pressure
mixture of CO, HCl, and catalyst. - Product is benzaldehyde.
35Clemmensen Reduction
- Acylbenzenes can be converted to alkylbenzenes by
treatment with aqueous HCl and amalgamated zinc.
36Part 2- NucleophilicAromatic Substitution
- A nucleophile replaces a leaving group on the
aromatic ring. - Electron-withdrawing substituents activate the
ring for nucleophilic substitution.
37Examples ofNucleophilic Substitution
38Addition-EliminationMechanism
39Benzyne Mechanism
- Reactant is halobenzene with no
electron-withdrawing groups on the ring. - Use a very strong base like NaNH2.
40Benzyne Intermediate
41Part 3- Addition ReactionsChlorination of Benzene
- Addition to the benzene ring may occur with high
heat and pressure (or light). - The first Cl2 addition is difficult, but the next
2 moles add rapidly. - The product, benzene hexachloride, is an
insecticide.
42Catalytic Hydrogenation
- Elevated heat and pressure is required.
- Possible catalysts Pt, Pd, Ni, Ru, Rh.
- Reduction cannot be stopped at an intermediate
stage.
43Part 4 Side Chain ReactionsBirch Reduction
Regiospecific
- A carbon with an e--withdrawing group
- is reduced.
- A carbon with an e--releasing group
- is not reduced.
44Birch Mechanism
45Side-Chain Oxidation
- Alkylbenzenes are oxidized to benzoic acid by hot
KMnO4 or Na2Cr2O7/H2SO4.
46Side-Chain Halogenation
- Benzylic position is the most reactive.
- Chlorination is not as selective as bromination,
results in mixtures. - Br2 reacts only at the benzylic position.
47SN1 Reactions
- Benzylic carbocations are resonance-stabilized,
easily formed. - Benzyl halides undergo SN1 reactions.
48SN2 Reactions
- Benzylic halides are 100 times more reactive than
primary halides via SN2. - Transition state is stabilized by ring.
49Part 5 - Reactions of Phenols
- Some reactions like aliphatic alcohols
- phenol carboxylic acid ? ester
- phenol aq. NaOH ? phenoxide ion
- Oxidation to quinones 1,4-diketones.
50Quinones
- Hydroquinone is used as a developer for film. It
reacts with light-sensitized AgBr grains,
converting it to black Ag. - Coenzyme Q is an oxidizing agent found in the
mitochondria of cells.
51ElectrophilicSubstitution of Phenols
- Phenols and phenoxides are highly reactive.
- Only a weak catalyst (HF) required for
Friedel-Crafts reaction. - Tribromination occurs without catalyst.
- Even reacts with CO2.
52End of Chapter 17