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Chapter 17 Reactions of Aromatic Compounds

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Sigma Complex. Intermediate is more stable if nitration occurs ... But halogens have lone pairs of electrons that can stabilize the sigma complex by resonance. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 17 Reactions of Aromatic Compounds


1
Chapter 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
2
Part 1 - Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution
  • Electrophile substitutes for a hydrogen on the
    benzene ring.

3
Mechanism
4
Energy Diagramfor aromatic electrophilic addition
5
Reactions
  • 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

6
Nitration of Benzene
  • Use sulfuric acid with nitric acid to form the
    nitronium ion electrophile.

NO2 then forms a sigma complex with benzene
7
Nitration 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.

8
Sigma Complex
  • Intermediate is more stable if nitration occurs
    at the ortho or para position.

9
Energy Diagram
10
Activating, 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.

11
The 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.

12
Summary ofActivators
13
Ortho Substitutionon Nitrobenzene
14
Para Substitution on Nitrobenzene
15
Meta Substitutionon Nitrobenzene
16
Deactivating 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.

17
Energy Diagram
18
Structure 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.

19
Summary of Deactivators
20
More Deactivators
21
Summary of Directing Effects
22
Multiple Substituents
  • The most strongly activating substituent will
    determine the position of the next substitution.
    May have mixtures.

23
Bromination of Benzene
  • Requires a stronger electrophile than Br2.
  • Use a strong Lewis acid catalyst, FeBr3.

24
Chlorination 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.

25
Halobenzenes
  • 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.

26
Sigma Complexfor Bromobenzene
27
Energy Diagram
28
Sulfonation
  • Sulfur trioxide, SO3, in fuming sulfuric acid is
    the electrophile.

29
Desulfonation
  • 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.

30
Friedel-Crafts Alkylation
31
Formation of Alkyl Benzene
32
Limitations 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.

33
Friedel-Crafts Acylation
34
Gatterman-KochFormylation
  • Formyl chloride is unstable. Use a high pressure
    mixture of CO, HCl, and catalyst.
  • Product is benzaldehyde.

35
Clemmensen Reduction
  • Acylbenzenes can be converted to alkylbenzenes by
    treatment with aqueous HCl and amalgamated zinc.

36
Part 2- NucleophilicAromatic Substitution
  • A nucleophile replaces a leaving group on the
    aromatic ring.
  • Electron-withdrawing substituents activate the
    ring for nucleophilic substitution.

37
Examples ofNucleophilic Substitution
38
Addition-EliminationMechanism
39
Benzyne Mechanism
  • Reactant is halobenzene with no
    electron-withdrawing groups on the ring.
  • Use a very strong base like NaNH2.


40
Benzyne Intermediate
41
Part 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.

42
Catalytic Hydrogenation
  • Elevated heat and pressure is required.
  • Possible catalysts Pt, Pd, Ni, Ru, Rh.
  • Reduction cannot be stopped at an intermediate
    stage.

43
Part 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.

44
Birch Mechanism
45
Side-Chain Oxidation
  • Alkylbenzenes are oxidized to benzoic acid by hot
    KMnO4 or Na2Cr2O7/H2SO4.

46
Side-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.

47
SN1 Reactions
  • Benzylic carbocations are resonance-stabilized,
    easily formed.
  • Benzyl halides undergo SN1 reactions.

48
SN2 Reactions
  • Benzylic halides are 100 times more reactive than
    primary halides via SN2.
  • Transition state is stabilized by ring.

49
Part 5 - Reactions of Phenols
  • Some reactions like aliphatic alcohols
  • phenol carboxylic acid ? ester
  • phenol aq. NaOH ? phenoxide ion
  • Oxidation to quinones 1,4-diketones.

50
Quinones
  • 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.

51
ElectrophilicSubstitution 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.

52
End of Chapter 17
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