Title: Aromatic Compounds
1Chapter 5
Aromatic Compounds
2Aromatic Compounds
- Aromatic compound A term used to classify
benzene and its derivatives containing 6-membered
rings with 3 double bonds - Arene An aromatic hydrocarbon
- Aryl group A group derived from an aromatic
compound by removal of an H give the symbol Ar-
3Structure of Benzene The Kekulé Proposal
- C6H6
- Six-numbered ring, with three double bonds
4Structure of BenzeneThe Resonance Proposal
- In benzene, each carbon-carbon connection is an
average of 1.5 bonds, midway between a single
bond and a double bond
- All carbon-carbon bonds in benzene are the same
length, 0.139 nm long - Most C-C single bonds have lengths near 0.154 nm
- Most CC double bonds are about 0.134 nm long
5- An orbital view of benzene shows the situation
more clearly, emphasizing the cyclic conjugation
of the benzene molecule and the equivalence of
the six carbon-carbon bonds - The carbon skeleton is a regular hexagon, with
all C-C-C and H-C-C bond angles 120 - Each the six carbon atoms has a p orbital that
can overlap equally well neighboring p orbitals
on both sides
6Naming Aromatic Compounds
- Monosubstituted alkylbenzenes are named as
derivatives of benzene - The same as other hydrocarbons, only with
benzene used as the parent chain - But many common names are retained
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8- Disubstituted Benzenes Locate the two groups by
numbers or by the locators ortho (1,2-), meta
(1,3-), and para (1,4-) - where one group imparts a special name, name the
compound as a derivative of that molecule - where neither group imparts a special name,
locate the groups and list them in alphabetical
order
9- Benzenes with more than two substituents are
named by numbering the position of each
substituent on the ring so that the lowest
possible number are used
10 11Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution Reactions
Bromination
- The most characteristic reaction of aromatic
compounds is electrophilic aromatic substitution - An electron-poor reagent (an electrophile, E)
reacts with the electron-rich aromatic ring (a
nucleophile) and substitutes for one of the ring
hydrogens
12- Many different substituents can be introduced
onto the aromatic ring by electrophilic
substitution - Halogenate the aromatic ring (substitute a
halogen -F, -Cl, - Nitrate (nitro group -NO2)
- Sulfonate (sulfonic acid group -SO3H)
- Alkylate (alkyl group -R)
- Acylate (acyl group -COR)
13- All these reactions take place by a simple
mechanism - Bromination of benzene
- FeBr3 as catalyst
Substitution Addition
14- The aromatic rings are less reactive toward
electrophiles than alkenes are - Br2 in CH2Cl2 solution reacts instantly with most
alkenes but does not react with benzene - A catalyst such as FeBr3 is needed
- The catalyst makes the molecule Br2 more
electrophilic by reacting with it to give FeBr4-
and Br - FeBr3 Br2 ?
FeBr4- Br - A base (FeBr4-) removes H from the
bromine-bearing carbon to yield the neutral
aromatic substitution product
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17Other Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution
Reactions
Chlorination and Iodination
(Antiallergy)
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19Nitration The electrophile is the nitronium
ion, NO2, generated as reaction of nitric
acid The two-step nitration/reduction sequence is
a key part of the industrial synthesis of many
dyes and pharmaceutical agents
20- Sulfonation
- Aromatic rings react with so-called fuming
sulfuric acid, a mixture of SO3 and H2SO4 - The reactive electrophile is HSO3
- A key step in the synthesis of such compounds as
the sulfa drug family of antibiotics
21The Friedel-Crafts Alkylation and Acylation
Reactions
- Alkylation
- Friedel-Crafts alkylation forms a new C-C bond
between a benzene ring and an alkyl group - Catalyst AlCl3
- Electrophile is a carboncation, R
- Friedel-Crafts reactions do not succeed on
aromatic rings substituted by the groups NO2,
-COR
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23- Acylation
- Friedel-Crafts acylation forms a new C-C bond
between a benzene ring and an acyl group
24Substituent Effects in Electrophilic Aromatic
Substitution
- Substituents already present on an aromatic ring
have two effects - Substituents affect the reactivity of the
aromatic ring - Activate
- Deactivate
- Substituents affect the orientation of the
reaction - Ortho, meta, and para
(deactivator)
(activator)
25(activator) ortho-para directing
(deactivator) meta directing
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28An Explanation of Substituent Effects
- Activating and deactivating effects in aromatic
rings - Activating groups donate electrons to the ring,
thereby making the ring more electron-rich,
stabilizing the carbocation intermediate, and
lowering the activation energy for its formation - Deactivating groups withdraw electrons from the
ring, thereby making the ring more electron-poor,
destabilizing the carbocation intermediate, and
raising the activation energy for its formation
29d-
H
d-
d
O?H
Cl
d
d-
C O
d
30Orienting effects in aromatic rings Ortho and
para directors
31Orienting effects in aromatic rings Meta
directors
32Oxidation and Reduction of Aromatic Compounds
- Benzene is unaffected by strong oxidizing agents
such as H2CrO4 and KMnO4 - halogen and nitro substituents are unaffected by
these reagents - Alkyl groups attached to aromatic ring are
readily attacked by oxidizing agents and are
converted into carboxyl group (-COOH)
33K2Cr2O7
H2SO4
34- Benzene is also inert to reduction under typical
hydrogenation condition - If high temperature and pressures are used
35Other Aromatic Compounds
- Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) contain
two or more aromatic rings, each pair of which
shares two ring carbons
(Carcinogenic substances)
(in mothballs)
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37Parabens
- Parabens are a class of chemicals widely used as
preservatives by cosmetic and pharmaceutical
industries - They are becoming increasingly controversial,
however, because they have been found in breast
cancer tumors (an average of 20 ng/g of tissue) - Parabens have also displayed the ability to
slightly mimic estrogen (a hormone known to play
a role in the development of breast cancer). No
effective direct links between parabens and
cancer have been established, however - Another concern is that the estrogen-mimic aspect
of parabens may be a factor in the increasing
prevalence of early puberty in girls - Studies indicate that methylparaben applied on
the skin may react with UVB leading to increased
skin aging and DNA damage
38The concept of Aromaticity
- Heterocyclic compound contains one or more atoms
other than carbon in a ring - Pyridine and pyrimidine are heterocyclic analogs
of benzene. Each is aromatic.
39- Aromatic character
- Have an uninterrupted (continued) cloud of
delocalized p electrons circling above and below
the plane of the molecule. (planar and cyclic) - Have one 2p orbital on each atom of the ring
- Have six p electrons (3 pairs), or odd number of
pairs of p electrons
40Organic Synthesis
- The only trick to devising an organic synthesis
is to work backward - What is the immediate precursor of that product
- Work back again, one step at a time
- Until a suitable starting material is found
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43PRACTICE
44Step 1
Step 2
45Step 3
a
b
Solution
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